January 11, 2018 – OC Weekly

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FOUR FINGER RING RETURNS | ROHRABACHER’S EPIC CNN MELTDOWN | PROSECUTOR FAILS BURDEN OF PROOF JANUARY 12-18, 2018 | VOLUME 23 | NUMBER 20

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Alex’s Bar collaborates with artist Marco Almera for rock-icon wall of fame


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The County

06 | MOXLEY CONFIDENTIAL |

Prosecutors fail to provide proof in case against alleged robber. By R. Scott Moxley 06 | POLITICAL FOOTBALL |

Atlanta Falcons vs. Philadephia Eagles. By Steve Lowery 07 | DANA WATCH | Rohrabacher’s epic CNN meltdown. By Matt Coker 07 | HEY, YOU! | Christmas sushi. By Anonymous

Feature

08 | PROFILE | Marco Almera brings a velvety rock-icon wall of fame to Alex’s Bar. By Arrissia Owen

in back

Calendar

11 | EVENTS | Things to do while

drying off.

Food

14 | REVIEW | The Country Club is a compulsory culinary experience. By Edwin Goei 14 | WHAT THE ALE | The Public House by Evans Brewing Co. in Huntington Beach. By Robert Flores 15 | HOLE IN THE WALL | Sup Noodle Bar in Buena Park. By Cynthia Rebolledo 16 | EAT THIS NOW | Roasted beet salad at El Mercado Modern Cuisine. By Cynthia Rebolledo 16 | DRINK OF THE WEEK | J Vineyards Cuvee 20 and Brut Rosé. By Nick Schou

Film

18 | REVIEW | Daniel Day-Lewis

brings a strange romance to life in Phantom Thread. By Aimee Murillo

Culture

22 | ART | Grand Central Art Center

exhibit tackles (and bungles) tough topics. By Dave Barton 22 | TRENDZILLA | Make 2018 the year of the power suit. By Aimee Murillo 23 | YESTERNOW | Reflecting on the long-gone, legendary Golden Bear. By Taylor Hamby 24 | PAINT IT BLACK | Check out Laguna Art Museum’s Pacific Standard Time shows before they’re gone. By Lisa Black

Music

26 | PROFILE | OC hip-hop group Four Finger Ring head home from Hempfest. by Nate Jackson 27 | PREVIEW | The Soft White Sixties drop a bilingual album. By Daniel Kohn 28 | LOCALS ONLY | Red River Massacre will make you run for the hills. By Brett Callwood

also

29 | SAVAGE LOVE | By Dan Savage 34 | TOKE OF THE WEEK | Goldleaf

Patient Journal. By Mary Carreon 38 | MARY PRANKSTER |

Will whoever is replacing Dana Rohrabacher please stand up? By Mary Carreon

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moxley confidential»news|issues|commentary

PoliticalFootball

How Not to Catch a Thief

» steve lowery

Judge says prosecutors bungle circumstantial-evidence case

U

naware of a coming lawenforcement disaster, Assistant United States Attorney Scott D. Tenley used an August 2017 opening statement to declare he possessed all the evidence needed to convict Justin Henning for a suspected “key supervisorial and leadership role” in a “smash and grab” robbery ring that targeted more than a dozen high-end Rolex watch and conFidential jewelry stores in Southern California. Tenley believed FBI cellphonetracking analysis, snitch testimony and common sense unraveled r scott Henning’s “very moxley careful” attempt to mask his criminal conduct. This defendant “profited from these robberies, without ever using a hammer and without ever pointing a gun,” because he helped run the heists from behind the scenes, the prosecutor alleged. But after an 18-day trial, the citizens’ panel didn’t fully accept Tenley’s version of reality. It rejected four of the seven charges against the Inglewood Family Gangster Blood member with a hefty rap sheet. Worse for the government, U.S. District Court Judge Cormac J. Carney, a conservative Republican appointed by President George W. Bush, emerged from proceedings sharing the view of James R. Tedford, Henning’s Pasadena-based defense attorney: The prosecution hadn’t come close to proving a single count. That sentiment, plus the judge’s tentative announcement that he planned to overturn the jury’s guilty verdicts, rattled Tenley and his prosecution team of Jeffrey Chemerinsky and Julia L. Reese. It also forced a tense, late-December courthouse showdown centering on conflicting views about the proper use of circumstantial evidence stemming from the defendant’s purported attendance at meetings held by the robbery ring, his frequent phone communications with members and an FBI assertion that he’d once likely been driving in the general vicinity of a targeted shop during a robbery. But going into the hearing, Carney, who is based in Orange County’s Ronald Reagan Federal Courthouse, made his position clear. “The government presented no evidence that Henning was an active participant in either planning meeting,” the judge observed. “Indeed, Henning never spoke during either planning

moxley

»  .

HOUSE OF CARNEY R. SCOTT MOXLEY

meeting. There is also no evidence that Henning helped select the target of the crime or plan its commission. There was no evidence Henning counseled any robbery participant or assigned roles. There was no evidence that Henning gave any orders or commands. And there was no evidence that Henning encouraged any of the robbery participants, recruited them to conduct the robbery or provided them any equipment.” Tenley, who equated Henning’s ties to the ring’s members as reasonable proof he was also one of the bandits, responded during oral argument, “I think the big disagreement that the parties are having and where the government would respectfully disagree with the court’s ruling are the inferences that can be drawn from the evidence. And it seems like the thrust of the court’s concern is that the evidence showed Mr. Henning was merely a spectator and not a participant. I think that isn’t a fair inference [against the government’s case].” “I’m not trying to be naïve,” the judge said. “It’s suspicious that he’s there, but, again, I don’t think suspicion is good enough. I need some sort of specific activity. The other defendants, you have evidence that they’re saying things at these meetings, they’re giving directions, they’re bringing firearms, they’re bringing tools and equipment, and I don’t have that with respect to Mr. Henning.” An increasingly frustrated Tenley replied, “I think the question is: Was the evidence presented to the jury sufficient that they can find all the elements [of the charged crimes had been met]?”

For example, the prosecutor noted, snitches inside the robbery ring testified that Henning had been assigned the role of emergency backup getaway driver at one point. “There can be no doubt that a rational trier of fact could have found Henning guilty” based on that assertion alone, Tenley argued. But this line of attack also troubled Carney, who observed the government produced no evidence that the defendant knew of or accepted the role; that his phone communications had pertained to the robberies versus, say, a Lakers game; or that his possible presence in the vicinity of an underway heist was damning information or merely lousy coincidence. Tenley gave a final pitch. “[Henning] didn’t want people [in the robbery ring] to have his telephone number,” the prosecutor stated. To him, this conduct indicated a ploy to “insulate” himself from a potential police investigation, not that, like millions of Americans, he innocently didn’t want widespread dissemination of his personal contact information. Such arguments went nowhere with Carney. “Look, I’m not a potted plant,” the judge said. “Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is a very high standard, and that’s why you have these principles in the law that just presence and knowledge [of a future crime] is not good enough.” He overturned the convictions. Five days before Christmas, 29-year-old Henning became a free man. As of press time, prosecutors had not announced whether they will appeal. RSCOTTMOXLEY@OCWEEKLY.COM

Atlanta Falcons vs. Philadelphia Eagles Atlanta update: The ATL is a trip being both the epicenter of hip-hop cool and a town that any check of local “Things to Do” columns shows still loves its Civil War re-enactments. Here, let us save you some time on the latter: You LOSE. Please start acting like it. Of course, facts, the Civil War and the South have never had much of a relationship. Last year not only gave rebirth to whether the war was fought over slavery—YES. YES, IT WAS—but some added revisionist Southern history that included two South Carolina lawmakers proposing building a monument to the state’s black Confederate troops. One of them, Mike Burns, said the monument was necessary because these African-Americans who “stepped up to defend their home state” had been “forgotten.” With good reason. They never existed. Ever. Never. An alternative, more accurate sculpture has been proposed in which South Carolina native James Brown is depicted learning of Burns’ proposed monument above a dignified scroll bearing the inscription “Oh, Hell No!” Philadelphia update: We all know Philadelphia is a tough town, especially on Santa Claus and hope. And what’s up with the way those people say dollar? “Hey, you got five dowars?” No excuse. Philadelphians fall into two camps: those who believe It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia is an insult to the town, being rife with pornographic, racist and misogynistic subject matter and those who can’t believe it keeps getting snubbed in the Best Documentary category at the Oscars. Philly actually got even tougher as more than 30 of the city’s assistant district attorneys were suddenly fired last week. The attorneys said they are at a complete loss as to why they were fired, but the reason might be found somewhere in the pages of “Porngate,” a local scandal in which Pennsylvania attorneys, judges and senior government officials shared more than 11,000 emails of either pornographic, racist or misogynistic subject matter. I’d pay a dowar for that! Consensus: Atlanta? Yes! Georgia? Oh, hell no! Go Eagles! LETTERS@OCWEEKLY.COM

aread more»online WWW.OCWEEKLY.COM/NEWS


Rodney Dana-field

» matt coker

about. He’s not getting a fair share from you and epresentative Dana Rohrabacher (R-Putin’s from the other media and things like this that will Jock Strap) is being accused today of having try to build into something sinister has happened.” melted down on CNN. Cabrera insisting she was showing RohraLeading into the Jan. 5 interview with CNN bacher no disrespect flipped the nutty guest into anchor Ana Cabrera, the Mouth That RohrabachRodney Dangerfield mode. “No disrespect? I got no ered had made the rounds up and down the dial respect. No disrespect? You don’t respect Trump, and across the interwebs blasting Jeff Sessions you don’t respect people who disagree with you for “betraying” President Donald politically, and that’s why the news media, Trump with the Attorney General’s which has an agenda, drives special Russia investigation recusal. prosecutors.” After Rohrabacher argued that See the full clip here: https://youtu. the recusal opened the door for be/_pgp8A_Spwk. special counsel Robert Muel“This CNN segment is going ler’s appointment, Cabrera viral—lots of tweeters saying @ tried to counter that many RepRohrabacher acted like legal experts agreed the a bully when @AnaCabrera AG did the right thing. Let tried to ask Q’s and factthe unhinging begin: check him,” tweeted CNN “Maybe somebody media reporter Brian Stelter. who is your guest should “Congressman Rohrabacher’s be able to say a few words,” unhinged meltdown on CNN conRohrabacher interrupted. “Your firms what we’ve known all along: that last interviews had nobody on the Dana Rohrabacher is fundamentally other side of the issue coming in to unfit to serve the people of California,” BOB AUL have the discussion with CNN. Maybe reacted Drew Godinich of the Democratic you should give me a chance, when you have me Congressional Campaign Committee. on your program, to express my opinion.” He found it even more troubling that As Rohrabacher droned on that Mueller’s Rohrabacher confirmed he is under Mueller’s investigation had strayed beyond Russian collumicroscope and is vehemently defending (Dana sion to include indictments for Paul Manafort (for donor) Manafort and Flynn, “associations with alleged money laundering) and Michael Flynn shadowy, corrupt figures” that “should disqual(for lying to the FBI), Cabrera tried to ask another ify him from holding public office. . . . [H]is refusal question. “Please, you might let me make my to give up power is all the more dangerous.” point before you interrupt me and try to refute me,” Rohrabacher responded. “This isn’t a news Got Dana Watch fodder? Email mcoker@ operation! This is what the president is upset ocweekly.com.

R

Heyyou!

» anonymous

contents | THE the COUNTY county | FEATURE feature | CALENDAR calendar | FOOD food | FILM film | CULTURE culture | MUSIC music | CLASSIFIEDS classifieds | | CONTENTS

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Christmas Sushi

BOB AUL

touch. When the bill came, she told me the sake was on the house! It was Christmas, she said again. I went back out into the cold and dark with a renewed faith in humanity . . . not to mention glowing-red ears from the sake. I sure hope the tip I left reflected my appreciation for your kindness. Thanks again!

HEY, YOU! Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations—changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent—to “Hey, You!” c/o OC Weekly, 18475 Bandilier Circle, Fountain Valley, CA 92708, or email us at letters@ocweekly.com.

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t was really nice to see your sushi place near the Newport pier still open and brightly lit on Christmas Eve, when it seemed the whole town was otherwise already dark and closed up. I’d been craving sushi all day, so I made a beeline there. You guys welcomed me in and took my order, which came almost immediately, as I was the only person there at first. I still had a nearly full Sapporo, so I decided to skip the hot sake I usually like to have with the meal. When your server checked on me later, I was already slowing down, but she convinced me to go for the sake I was missing—it was Christmas, after all, she said cheerfully. I finished the last few pieces of sashimi along with that sake—it really was the perfect

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lex’s Bar is part punk-rock institution, part seedy dive bar, and part your tía’s sitting room, with velvet swags and sofas that children are not allowed to touch. But most surprisingly, Long Beach’s best place to take in everything from punk-rock karaoke to a Northern Soul night is also part art gallery. Pinkies out on the Pabst, please. Surprised? Alex Hernandez wishes you weren’t. Long before he unlocked the doors to the bar that bears his name in January 2000, even longer before the place became a local landmark, Hernandez formulated a steadfast vision of what he felt a working-class watering hole should look like. His growing collection of vintage black velvets, kitschy oil paintings and bric-a-brac have been elements of that carefully cultivated aesthetic, gracing its crimson red-and-slate-gray walls from the get-go. “I always thought that’s what a bar should look like: red walls, darkness, naked ladies and velvets on the walls,” Hernandez says as he surveys the room’s meticulously displayed artifacts. “It’s like what my parents’ and grandparents’ generations’ bars would have looked like.” Well, yes and no. Hernandez’s blend of velvet portraits that extend from Pancho Villa to Elvis to Iggy Pop along with boudoir oils on canvas ratchets up the original ambiance to a level that got the bar cast in HBO’s vampire drama True Blood and Tenacious D’s movie The Pick of Destiny. But it’s his eye for talent, authenticity and all-around greatguyness that has attracted big names such as Green Day, Black Flag and the Offspring to host secret shows on the dramatically draped stage. On the day artist Marco Almera delivers the eighth black velvet painting for Alex’s rock icon wall, which boasts a dead-on, fuzzy visage of Siouxsie Sioux, the namesake behind 1980s post-punk Siouxsie & the Banshees, the collaborators shake hands and stand back in awe to take in the Goth queen. Sioux is the second woman among a velvetized VIP list that includes Motörhead’s Lemmy Kilmister, David Bowie, Lou Reed, Joey Ramone, Joan Jett and now the Cadillac Tramps’ Mike “Gabby” Gaborno. Adding to the bar’s pedigree, as well as the low-brow gallery vibe, the 2,700-square-foot building that dates back to the 1940s for nightlife is also home to an original, larger-than-life, autographed portrait of Johnny Cash that graced the walls of the famed Foothill Club in Signal Hill after the singer performed at the country and western bar back in the day. The legendary club transformed into a punk-rock mainstay during the 1990s, playing host to bands such as Sublime, the Humpers and Throwrag. Hernandez cut his teeth at the Foothill, bouncing and booking bands for the Price family after working his way up from Bogart’s and the Clipper. If Hernandez has his way, the portrait of 1950s rockabilly duo the Collins Kids that also hung at the Foothill will be reunited with the Man In Black behind the bar. He knows a guy. Alex’s Bar celebrates 18 years on East Anaheim Street the weekend of Jan. 27 and 28 in all its seedy, scarlet glory, with an annual rowdy, punk-rock musical extravaganza anniversary party. This year’s two-night bill features headliners the Melvins, Fartbarf, Spindrift, Mike Watt & the Missingmen, Bad Cop/Bad Cop, and OC’s the Adolescents. Velvet Siouxsie will be framed and ready for her closeup by the big event. Blondie’s Debbie Harry will join Sioux next, adding a bit more balance to the gender divide in this rogues’ gallery.

elvet VGoldmine

DIVE DESIGN DREAMS

Alex’s Bar collaborates with artist Marco Almera for rock-icon wall of fame

By Arrissia Owen

JOHN GILHOOLEY

The bar’s Mexican velvets portraying chimps playing poker and Satan on the shitter are barely a glimpse of Hernandez’s entire collection, which features everything and everyone from the sacred to Snoopy in numbers upward of 50. His taste for the tacky extends back to his 1970s upbringing in Long Beach and his fond remembrance of his childhood’s more ostentatious decorating choices. Suffice it to say that when members of the Hernandez family purge a set of gaudy light fixtures or a wrought-iron wonder, they know who to call, Hernandez admits with a laugh, pointing out his aunt’s re-homed chandeliers. “Every gaudy thing that got updated in the ’80s, my relatives gave to me because they knew I had really bad taste,” he says with a proud grin. But before jumping to conclusions that Hernandez subscribes to some sort of hipster fetishization, know that this guy’s love for questionable artwork is 100 percent. That adoration became ambition when he tagged along with friends in punk band the Swingin’ Utters on tour in San Francisco. He and the band’s original drummer, Greg McEntee, headed to Casanova Lounge in the Mission District for some pints. The dive they ended up at had a cache of velvets so awe-inspiring that Hernandez’s obsession took grip, and he began plotting the vibe he’d create if he ever got to call the shots.


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Alex’s Bar is the perfect platform for Almera’s black-velvet style, which he respectfully refers to as “Tijuana plush.” The bar’s old-school Don Jose’s lounge feel with its quilted-leather bar stools harkens back to the same period when velvet paintings hit their peak popularity, around the time ex-pat Doyle Harden set up a Mexican factory in the ’70s and started mass producing the paintings via local artists. That watereddown art form originated with Russian Orthodox priests, or possibly even 13th-century painters in India. What we do know is that during the 1500s, Spanish conquistadors took velvet to Mexico and the Philippines. So, while religious figures and sultry fabrics may seem mismatched, there’s precedence. Some early black-velvet paintings still hang in Vatican museums. Almera was born in Bellflower, not far from where his mother, JoAnn, attended St. Bernard’s Catholic School. He spent his formative years in La Habra, an OC suburb by Fullerton and Brea. Just as a young Hernandez was drawn to the slinky awesomeness of textured home décor, Almera as a boy was fascinated by the stained-glass

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PORTRAIT OF A VELVET ARTIST AS A YOUNG PUNK

windows ever-present in his similarly Hispanic-Catholic upbringing. The religious imagery focused on iconography, saints and swords, but to the kid sitting in the cathedral, the drama and details were mesmerizing on another level. By eighth grade, Almera’s artistic eye and skill started to take shape. Pee-Chee folder doodles offered early glimpses of his artistic flair, wowing classmates with his exceptional tennis rackets turned samurai swords. Bands such as the Clash, Madness, Oingo Boingo, the Go-Go’s and the Specials provided the soundtrack for his school years, as well as the inspiration to turn the whitewalls of Vans shoes into moving marquees. It was the beginning of art and music’s relationship to Almera’s creative pursuits. Around that time, he and his buddies delved into Dungeons & Dragons, Stranger Things-style, but instead of discovering the Upside Down, Almera’s cohorts became his first fans, requesting drawings of their players. The fire breathers and slayers lent themselves to the new music genre sweeping their school: heavy metal and hard rock from Van Halen, Led Zeppelin, AC/ DC, Black Sabbath and others. The genre’s aesthetic integrated with Almera’s emerging style, one influenced heavily by Iron Maiden’s resident artist, Derek Riggs, creator of the band’s ghoulish mascot, the ubiquitous Eddie. “It was dark, but there was an element of exactness to it,” Almera says. “I appreciated the attention to detail at an early stage in my development as an artist.” Equally as influential were his surroundings. Almera grew up merging the southern section of the county’s beach-centric, surfer lifestyle and the lowrider, rockabilly-by-wayof-punk aesthetic of North OC bands such as Social Distortion and Cadillac Tramps. The latter mixed Chicano estilo with punkrock chords, all of it informing Almera’s homegrown style, refined during his time studying fine art at UC Santa Cruz. But that training proved too relaxed for the OC-bred artist, offering only pass or fail grades. Before long, Almera started creating designs for OC companies including Volcom, Hurley and Lucky 13; later, HarleyDavidson tapped him for his underground style of visual art. His early years working for Epitaph Records creating album artwork

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Not much later, Hernandez’s dream became reality, complete with a growing number of fresh-from-the-flea-market velvet art installations, second only to the number displayed at Chinatown’s Velveteria, the velvet-painting museum that relocated to Los Angeles from Portland in 2013. Two years ago, Hernandez told his friend Dave Warshaw, a San Diego-based tattoo artist, his dream of having his own rock & roll hall of fame in velvet watching over the place. Warshaw, who sings and plays guitar for bands the Creepy Creeps and the Locust, is also an enthusiast of cool shit and pop surrealism. So, of course, he had a guy. Warshaw and Almera first crossed paths through La Luz de Jesus Gallery in Los Angeles and later in San Diego’s thriving tiki art scene after Almera relocated in 2012 to pursue a bachelor’s in graphic design at San Diego State University. As small as the tiki world is, North America’s roster of black-velvet painters is much tinier, so a referral helps. A Facebook DM later, and the project was in motion.

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ALMERA WITH HERNANDEZ

JOHN GILHOOLEY

Velvet Goldmine » FROM PAGE 9

January 13February 10

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for bands such as Voodoo Glow Skulls and Dropkick Murphys led to his frame-quality rock posters for bands such as Sublime, Turbonegro, Reverend Horton Heat and the Supersuckers. His posters have been featured in coffee-table books, including 2004’s Art of Modern Rock and Paul Grushkin’s 2006 book Rockin’ Down the Highway: The Cars and People That Made Rock Roll. Almera also amassed a following among surf-industry types drawn to his meditative, golden-hued, wave-inspired paintings, sometimes from connections made in the lineup. It was there he reconnected with Joe McElroy, Hurley’s former director of global branding, who became a client. He also combines his love of vintage and surf with his interest in the tiki art scene, born out of the cultish, populist low-brow art magazine Juxtapoz, started by some of the genre’s most famous stars, including Robert Williams, C.R. Stecyk III and the late Greg Escalante.

SUBJECT MATTERS

Almera shared the tike scene’s affinity for artist Edgar Leeteg’s tropical paradises and buxom island beauties that sprung from cheap velveteen canvases during the 1930s and ’40s. Leeteg breathed new life into the art form before it fizzled again by the 1980s. But just a decade later, lowrider and rockabilly culture merged, adopting the art form as its own and offering new life in OC’s punk-inspired, tattooed subculture. But as much as Almera yearned to learn how to emulate Leeteg’s work, the craft didn’t divulge its dry-brush secrets solely through study. “I would look at the original black-velvet paintings, but the paintings wouldn’t reveal to me how they were created,” Almera says. “I couldn’t see the formula, so I came up with my own way. It’s very technical, but it looks authentic.” The first black-velvet painting Almera created, titled Tiki Dream, was Polynesian-themed and shown at La Luz de

Jesus Gallery in 1999, where Juxtapoz darling Stephen Pizzurro, a.k.a. The Pizz, a.k.a. the Lord of Low-Brow, wanted it for his own collection and offered to trade Almera an original of his own. The buzz began to build, adding Metallica’s James Hetfield and comedian David Cross to the list of Almera’s black-velvet clients. By far, however, the most popular velvet Almera created is the saintly depiction of local icon Gaborno, based on a picture by Weekly photographer John Gilhooley. The lead singer of the Cadillac Tramps, Flock of Goo Goo, X-Members and Manic Hispanic died last year after a lengthy battle with diabetes and cancer. His bands, as well as his extended family of musicians— including Jonny Two Bags, Santos y Sinners, Wax Apples, and Black Diamond Riders—have been regulars on Alex’s stage, making it a fitting tribute. Gaborno played his last show at Alex’s Bar on Oct. 6, 2016, a fundraiser for the young son he knew he’d soon leave behind. He died Jan. 4, 2017. “Everyone loved the painting,” says Brian Coakley, Gaborno’s longtime friend, collaborator and guitarist for Cadillac Tramps. “It’s not simply that the painting is awesome and captures him so well—it does that. But it’s also that it’s now hanging in a sort of place of reverence in the local music community and beside some other legendary music icons.” Almera had met Gaborno a couple of times at Manic Hispanic shows and was a huge fan of the singer and his famous selfdeprecating wit and off-color humor. The artist took the liberty of adding a golden aura around the singer’s head, anointing him to watch over Alex’s Bar from behind his bandana. “It was definitely my religious roots showing through,” says Almera, who is no longer Catholic but remains a Christian. “He does look like a patron saint of punk rock now. It is what I was hoping for.” ALEX’S BAR 2913 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach, (562) 434-8292; www.alexsbar.com. For more information about Marco Almera’s art work, visit marcoalmera.com.


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[THEATER]

FIT TO SCRIPT

ShowOff! International Playwriting Festival

Babes of Yore

A Strip Through Time: A History of Burlesque

Before becoming the popularized art form we now know it as, burlesque cycled through various formats, starting during the early Victorian era. What we typically regard as bawdy, exaggerated and full of va-va-VOOM went through its own phases, with stars such as Tempest Storm, April March (known as the First Lady of Burlesque) and Kitten Navidad headlining shows and wowing crowds in postwar America. Take a sexy history lesson with modern-day burlesque star Kitten DeVille and others performing tributes and iconic moments from past legends, emceed by Lili Von Schtupp. Sit back and watch the feathers, bubbles and pasties fly—for, um, education. A Strip Through Time: A History of Burlesque at Harvelle’s Long Beach, 201 E. Broadway, Long Beach, (562) 269-5230; longbeach.harvelles.com. 9 & 11 p.m. $15$25. 21+. —AIMEE MURILLO

9

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sat/01/13

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[EVENTS]

RIDE OF YOUR LIFE

Monster Jam

All hail the iron gods of Monster Jam, who rollick, careen and roll in the dirt to make the walls of Angel Stadium tremble.These gigantic machines assemble for another season of high-flying freestyle wheelies and races in the dugout, with just about all of your favorites in tow: Avenger, Big Kahuna, Jester, Megalodon, Ice Cream Man, Whiplash, ElToro Loco, Mutant, Grave Digger and many more! Purchase a Pit Party pass and meet the drivers, see the trucks up close, take pictures and grab autographs of your heroes before they’re off to another gravity-defying, spectacle-laden event. Monster Jam at Angel Stadium, 2000 E. Gene Autry Way, Anaheim; www.monsterjam.com. Pit Party, 2:30 p.m.; show time, 6:30 p.m. $25$143; Pit Party, $10. —AIMEE MURILLO

[LITERARY EVENTS]

Fight for Your Write! An Evening of Resistance and Prose

Feel the urge to pick up a pen in protest after every temper tantrum tweeted by our impetuous president? An inkwell of rebellion awaits at Writers Resist, an online literary journal born out of the ashes of the 2016 election. In fact, the collective is celebrating its first birthday with an event at Gatsby Books in Long Beach. Drinks and snacks will tide over all who come to hear Writers Resist authors read poetry and prose from an exhausting, yet necessary year of bucking the Trump regime. Bring a friend and wield a pen—and get inspired to craft your own cathartic writing. An Evening of Resistance and Prose at Gatsby Books, 5535 Spring St., Long Beach, (562) 208-5862; gatsbybooks.com. 5 p.m. Free. —GABRIEL SAN ROMÁN

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It’s time for the Camino Real Playhouse’s annual showcase of seven 10-minute plays—and you, the audience, get to vote for the winners! Every year, the playhouse opens its gates to submissions from authors across the country (deadline is October), and the top plays are selected for production. One runner-up is also chosen for a reading, offering even more exposure to playwrights who’d like to debut new work. If you’re a writer and missed out this time around, go see the show to get a lay of the land, and then get to writing, champ. ShowOff! International Playwriting Festival at Camino Real Playhouse, 31776 El Camino Real, San Juan Capistrano, (949) 489-8082; www.caminorealplayhouse.org. 8 p.m.Through Jan. 21. $22-$44. —SR DAVIES

[BURLESQUE]

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ME

fri/01/12

M ONT H XX–X X, 2 014

lnd ng work

calendar *

thursday›

HAPPY 100, LENNY!

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sun/01/14 [CONCERT]

Watch Closely Now Kris Kristofferson

There are plenty of people who can write, act and sing, but few can do all three as well as Kris Kristofferson. He’s written many of your favorite songs: “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down” and “Once More With Feeling.” Add to that an impressive acting résumé that includes Heaven’s Gate and A Star Is Born, for which

he won a Golden Globe for Best Actor. The singer continues to churn out solid music, with his most recent album, 2016’s The Cedar Creek Sessions, earning him a Grammy nomination for Best Americana Album. With his laid-back swagger, the 81-year-old, grizzled troubadour returns to the Coach House to remind folks why he’s one of the best songwriters of all time. Kris Kristofferson at the Coach House, 33157 Camino Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano, (949) 496-8930; thecoachhouse. com. 7 p.m. $79.50. —WYOMING REYNOLDS

[THEATER]

Long Live the King Elvis ’68

One of the heights of Elvis Presley’s later career was his 1968 television comeback special, simply titled Elvis, in which the King of Rock & Roll sang all his classic hits in an intimate setting. Meant to put Presley back in style after the changes in the music scene and shifts in youth culture, the special was an enormous success and launched

mon/01/15

SMOKEY ROBINSON

[CONCERT]

MICHAEL BOLTON

THIS FRI JAN 12

Gonna Resonate The Resonars

JAN 19

GARY ALLAN

ADAM SANDLER

JAN 20

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Tucson’s mighty Resonars—the unstoppable project of engineer/producer/ singer/songwriter Matt Rendon—put out a greatest-hits compilation a year or two ago, and you know what? This is one of the few garage rock outfits going that deserve it. For decades, Rendon has been sharpening a distinctive sound that adds punk power and sunshine-pop harmony to revved-up ’60s-style guitar rock. Like Reigning Sound’s Greg Cartwright, he’s got soul, and like Guided By Voice’s Bob Pollard, he’s got rock & roll all figured out. Rendon may yet be destined for bigger things, but he’s already made a few truly great ones. The Resonars with the Sloths and the May Company at the Continental Room, 115 W. Santa Fe Ave., Fullerton, (714) 5264529; continentalroomoc.com. 9 p.m. Free. 21+. —CHRIS ZIEGLER

tue/01/16 [THEATER]

The True Romeo Shakespeare In Love

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the final upswing in his career. But behind the scenes, as dramatized in Brian Newell’s play, Presley feels the pressure and sees this as his one chance to make or break his career. Travel back through time to experience his epic show in the flesh and get inside Presley’s head with actor Casey Ryan, who performs as the King with uncanny likeness and talent. Elvis ’68 at Maverick Theater, 110 E. Walnut Ave., Fullerton, (714) 526-7070; www.mavericktheater.com. 6 p.m. Through Feb. 25. $15-$30. —AIMEE MURILLO

1/9/18 9:13 AM

The most-produced play of the current theater season makes its way to South Coast Repertory (SCR), and with it comes all the elaborate period costumes, secretive romance and delightful shenanigans of the Oscar-winning movie it’s based on. SCR’s Marc Masterson helms this one and said he was drawn to Shakespeare In Love for its humor, cleverness and all the Easter eggs hidden throughout the storyline (ones any true W.S. fan will be sure to pick up). Fun fact: The cast is composed of 23 people and one dog. Bonus: None of them is Gwyneth Paltrow. Shakespeare In Love at South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Dr., Costa Mesa, (714) 708-5555; www.scr.org. 7:30 p.m. Through Feb. 10. $20-$53. —ERIN DEWITT


[ART]

Back From the Vault ‘Pivotal: Highlights From the Collection’

Almost every year, the Orange County Museum of Art (OCMA) culls a showcase of works from its permanent collection—and after 60 years of exhibiting contemporary art, you can imagine the size of that collection. This year’s set includes more than 100 works of various genres and mediums by notable artists from Southern California and beyond. See seminal pieces by such visionaries as Chris Burden, Bruce Conner, Ed Ruscha, Betye Saar, Catherine Opie, Patrick Wilson, Mary Heilmann, among others. “Pivotal” is the right word to describe this show, as it reflects OCMA’s long-standing goal to champion contemporary artists who seek to broaden discussions on art, society, politics and the world. Come further your arts education. “Pivotal: Highlights From the Collection” at the Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Dr., Newport Beach, (949) 759-1122; www.ocma.net. 11 a.m. Through Feb. 25. $7.50-$10; Fridays, free.

*

[CONCERT]

RUNNING ON EMPTY

TICKETS and DINNER RESERVATIONS: 949-496-8930 1/11 1/12

The Empty Pockets Much hype exists for Chicago band the Empty Pockets, who are often categorized as unpretentious, genuine and cheeky. The hype is real; the foursome have MORE a zeal for ONLINE OCWEEKLY.COM performing their particular blend of Americana, pop and rock. It’s as if they never stopped jamming in the garage just for fun.There’s a sense of real collaboration in their tunes, as if they all melded minds to craft the perfect record. Check out what all the fuss is about when this entertaining and talented group play at Don the Beachcomber. The Empty Pockets at Don the Beachcomber, 16278 Pacific Coast Hwy., Huntington Beach, (562) 592-1321; www. donthebeachcomber.com. 7:30 p.m. $10-$99. —AIMEE MURILLO

a

1/11 THE SUBDUDES

»

—AIMEE MURILLO

thu/01/18

1/12 TOMMY CASTRO

1/27 1/28

1/25 DAVID WILCOX

[CONCERT]

Yung Lean and Sad Boys

FEEL THE BERN

One Hand, One Heart: 100 Years of Bernstein

—AIMEE MURILLO

2/14 OTTMAR LIEBERT

2/16 THE 5TH DIMENSION

THE ENGLISH BEAT MAX WEINBERG’S JUKEBOX

2/21 SHOVELS & ROPE

2/25 ATLANTA RHYTHM SECTION

LOS RIOS ROCK SCHOOL

THE MUSICAL BOX SIDE DEAL (Members of Train, Sugar Ray, & Pawnshop Kings) feat. Skunk Baxter OTTMAR LIEBERT & LUNA NEGRA 2/15 The Very Best Of DAVE MASON 2/16 THE 5TH DIMENSION 2/17 THE DAN BAND 2/18 KATE VOEGELE TYLER HILTON 2/21 SHOVELS & ROPE 2/23 AMBROSIA 2/24 MARC SEAL 2/25 ATLANTA RHYTHM SECTION / FIREFALL 2/28 TINSLEY ELLIS 3/2 KENNY WAYNE SHEPHERD BAND

3/3 SQUIRREL NUT ZIPPERS

3/9 GARY PUCKETT

3/17 THE FENIANS

UPCOMING SHOWS 3/3

SQUIRREL NUT ZIPPERS 3/4 KEIKO MATSUI 3/6 KENNY WAYNE SHEPHERD BAND 3/9 GARY PUCKETT & THE UNION GAP 3/10 WALTER TROUT 3/16 STEVE TYRELL 3/17 ST. PATRICK’S DAY WITH THE FENIANS 3/18 JIM MESSINA 3/23 BEATLES vs STONES 3/24 3/25

- A MUSICAL SHOWDOWN

CARL PALMER’S ELP LEGACY MARTIN SEXTON

4/4 4/14

ARLO GUTHRIE MELISSA MANCHESTER 4/15 LOS LONELY BOYS 4/19 URIAH HEEP 4/20 DIXIE DREGS 4/21 Y&T 4/22 WISHBONE ASH 4/27 HAL KETCHUM 4/28 ZEPPELIN USA

(Led Zeppelin Tribute)

(3 hour set w/intermission)

5/8

MADELEINE PEYROUX 5/16 BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 6/7 ULI JON ROTH

866.468.3399 33157 Camino Capistrano | San Juan Capistrano

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Leonard Bernstein would have celebrated his 100th birthday this year, and what better way to celebrate the highly influential teacher/conductor/composer than to put on a tribute gala, featuring some of today’s top musical-theater performers?Two-time Tony Award nominee Mary Testa, Broadway stars Jessica Vosk and David Burnham, as well as rising stars Alex Getlin and Joshua Israel will be joined by host/ director Scott Coulter and John Boswell, at the piano, as well as Cal State Fullerton’s chorus, directed by Robert Istad, in performing some of Bernstein’s greatest hits. Expect to hear songs from West Side Story, On the Town,Candide,WonderfulTown and more! One Hand, One Heart: 100 Years of Bernstein at SamueliTheater, 615Town Center Dr., Costa Mesa, (714) 556-2787; www.scfta.org. 7:30 p.m.; also Jan. 19-20. $89. —SCOTT FEINBLATT

2/3 2/8

LOS RIOS ROCK SCHOOL PAUL BARRERE & FRED TACKETT HOWARD JONES Solo

2/17

J AN UA RY 1 2- 1 8, 20 1 8

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[CONCERT]

Finding success through the typical channels of millennial attention (i.e., viral YouTube video stardom), Swedish rapper Yung Lean was quickly met with underground hype that made way for mainstream success. Along with members of Sad Boys, Lean has been touring throughout Europe and North America, finding fans in youths and rap enthusiasts alike thanks to his affected vocals and melodic beats. Fresh from releasing his third studio album, Stranger, Lean and his collective headline tonight’s show at the Observatory, one of the first stops on the North American wing of their tour, which has already consumed the bigger part of Europe in the past two months. Yung Lean and Sad Boys with Thaiboy Digital at the Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; www. observatoryoc.com. 11 p.m. $24.

2/2

2/9 2/10 2/11 1/28 PAUL BARRERE FRED TACKETT 2/14

COURTESY OF THE LEONARD BERNSTEIN OFFICE INC.

Lean and Mean

THE SUBDUDES TOMMY CASTRO AND THE PAINKILLERS 1/13 DESPERADO 1/14 KRIS KRISTOFFERSON 1/19 LITTLE RIVER BAND 1/20 Guitar Legend DICK DALE 1/21 HERMAN’S HERMITS starring PETER NOONE 1/23 MICHAEL NESMITH & First National Band 1/24 JOHN HIATT & The Goners, Featuring SONNY LANDRETH 1/25 DAVID WILCOX 1/26 JEFFERSON STARSHIP

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THE COACH HOUSE www.thecoachhouse.com

wed/01/17

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food»reviews | listings

WHATTHEALE » ROBERT FLORES

In Da Club

The Country Club opens with velvet ropes, compulsory valet and a bouncer BY EDWIN GOEI

I

arrived at the Country Club with a chip on my shoulder. It was because of two things. First, there was the compulsory valet, which, I thought at the time, is ridiculous in this part of Costa Mesa. If a restaurant called “Pancakes R Us” directly across the street has self-parking, why can’t this place? Then there was the bouncer wearing a Secret Service earpiece who not only asked if I had a reservation, but also waited for an answer in the affirmative before he opened the door. “Oh, I see,” I muttered, “this is one of those places.” My fears were not assuaged upon entering. I felt as if I’d been pushed into a wall of noise. Imagine a packed room of people all talking loudly to make themselves heard above other people talking loudly. Then imagine an A-frame ceiling bouncing it all back and amplifying the sound tenfold. Following the hostess, I pushed through a crowd that had gathered around the main bar. This was going to be a long night. But as I sat on an overstuffed but admittedly very comfy banquette in a corner, I started to relax. Apart from the acoustics, this remodel by Wild Goose Tavern’s Mario Marovic of what used to be Pierce Street Annex was done well. I could tell no expense was spared to turn it into something out of the Roaring Twenties, with rows of penny arcade-era light bulbs softly illuminating the bar and trophies, polo sticks and various Great Gatsby-esque bric-a-brac on the walls that suggest we common folk had somehow crashed an exclusive club for the wealthy and privileged. The first of two servers I’d meet that night recommended some dishes, which happened to happily coincide with what I already had my eye on. Still, I asked for a few more minutes to decide. By the time the second server came around, I’d made up my mind. But this didn’t stop that second gent, a born salesman, from suggesting what he thought were musthaves, starting with a particular cocktail. When I politely declined, he asked if I was sure, pointing out that the bartender was known for that particular drink. “No, thanks,” I said. He must have sensed I was beginning to get annoyed because from that point, he stopped being pushy and became generally enthusiastic about the menu. It’s probably why he didn’t blink when I told him I’d rather have the crispy octopus than the crispy Brussels sprouts he recommended— a restaurant trope I’ve grown tired of. I made the right choice with the octopus. Tender as sin with a texture that’s not

DOUBLE-DIP-WORTHY

American Pub THE PUBLIC HOUSE BY EVANS BREWING CO. 7511 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, (714) 902-1771; www.evansbrewco.com/pub.

T

EDWIN GOEI

unlike perfectly roasted turkey breast, the lightly battered tentacles were paired with hunks of fried potatoes with a crunchy golden outer crust and fluffy interior. It was this potato-and-octopus combo that started to chip away at my first impression of the place. Any place that can fry a potato like this and make an octopus like that should have a bouncer. When I asked the second server how the octopus was prepared, he cracked a joke about revealing the secret and told me it was “massaged in salt, cooked sous-vide, then flash-fried at the last second.” Every dish I tried after that was just as good. The French dip rivaled Philippe’s in LA and Houston’s in Irvine. The sandwich itself was faultless, with a butter-toasted hoagie roll so light it floated and sliced prime rib so soft it melted. And then there was the au jus—a dip built not from bouillon cubes, but from meat drippings, fond and stock. The melted fat on top of the ramekin revealed this, but the leftovers confirmed its pedigree, having congealed into Jell-O in my fridge. I was impressed. Also, I must give credit where it’s due:

It was actually that second server who detected that my sandwich initially came without it. He rushed to the kitchen to get the hot jus out to me before I even asked. He couldn’t have been more pleasant and helpful the entire night. And, as it turns out, the white seabass entrée he said was a solid choice—topped with mojo verde and served atop a spinach gnocchetti and carrots roasted to sugary shrivels—couldn’t have been more transcendent. The flesh was delicate and the skin seared so crisply it was indistinguishable from a chicharrón. I ended up loving the place. As I was leaving, I also realized that both the free valet and the bouncer were absolutely necessary here. A line of people had formed behind a velvet rope outside. If Pancakes R Us were this popular, it would need them, too. THE COUNTRY CLUB 330 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa, (949) 281-2582; www.countryclubcm.com. Open Mon.-Fri., 2 p.m.-2 a.m.; Sat.-Sun., 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Starters and sides, $7-$23; entrées, $13-$110. Full bar.

he Irvine-based Evans Brewing Co. recently opened a second Public House in Huntington Beach at the Bella Terra Mall. But the brewery itself has been around since 1994 and is one of the oldest in Orange County, brewing beer for restaurants and distributing to seven different states. In 2016, it opened its first Public House in downtown Fullerton with a full line of Evans craft beer alongside a menu of mouth-watering burgers, pizzas and brats, plus live music on the weekends. The Huntington Beach location follows suit, offering a happy hour every day from 4 to 6 p.m., Whisky Flight Wednesdays ($12 for three tasters of whisky paired with three samples of Evans craft beer), Brat Tuesdays (a delicious brat and a beer for $10) and a weekend brunch with bottomless mimosas. The Public House in Huntington Beach also has a great tasting room with an outdoor patio. Inside, the spacious main room boasts a large, square-shaped, full-service bar, complete with blended beer cocktails and a collection of more than 40 different labels of bourbon, whisky and cognac. While you’re quenching your thirst, try one of the juicy burgers; the patty for the pub burger is a special mix of ground rib-eye, brisket and short-rib meat. It comes piled high with coleslaw and caramelized onions. I opted for one of the beer-infused sausages on a roll, all of which have just the right snap and pair perfectly with the house beers. I went with Evans Brewing’s excellent Joaquin Dead (5.2 percent ABV), a Mexican red ale that is malt-forward with hints of rich toffee. I followed that with the hoppy, smooth double IPA (8.4 percent ABV). The bartender let me try the off-the-menu, one-off pecan pie porter. It was like drinking a pecan pie—slightly sweet and nutty. It just shows how creative and talented the Evans brew team is! LETTERS@OCWEEKLY.COM

ROBERT FLORES


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SUP NOODLE BAR 5141 Beach Blvd., Ste. B, Buena Park, (714) 521-2444; supnoodlebar.com.

» cynthia rebolledo

LETTERS@OCWEEKLY.COM

The Perfect Choice for... Lunch

Dinner

Pasta Alla Vodka

Tuscan Grilled Pork Chops

EAT • REPEAT • REWARD —A MyBRIO BENEFIT—

IR VIN E SPECT R U M CE N T E R 774 SPECTRUM CENTER DR, IRVINE, CA 92618 949.341.0380 | w w w.brioitalian.com

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24 hours, its richness accentuated with star anise and garnished with white onions, scallions and culantro (similar to cilantro but more pungent). This is just the base broth; Sup Noodle Bar offers an even more aromatic Northern Vietnamese shaken-style pho that includes garlic, sliced onions, scallions and wok-seared bone marrow oil for a smokier flavor. Choose between thin and flat rice noodles or ramen to pair with tender pho short rib, pho tom (shrimp), pho dau hu (soft or fried tofu), pho beef belly, pho duoi bo (braised bone-in oxtail) or pho dac biet, chef’s choice of beef belly, tendon, brisket, meatballs and short rib. Add a sous-vide (slow poached) egg to any of these for an extra layer of umami. The chef also offers rotating noodle specials (we highly recommend ordering these). In the fall, they served garlic noodles with grilled prawns (think Garlic and Chives) and duck breast pho—succulent pan-seared duck breast served alongside a bright broth. The meatiness of the duck combines with the pho for a rich, pleasant flavor that lingers. Pair this dish with ramen noodles— you’ll thank us later. Now that Sup Noodle Bar has opened a second location in Cerritos, wait times may dwindle for their bowls of pho—but either way, it’s worth the wait.

J AN UA RY 1 2- 1 8, 20 1 8

he broth on its own is fantastic: a standardlooking bowl of steaming-hot pho sets itself apart from the rest with its strongly flavorful bone broth and fragrant spices. We recommend coming in for lunch because, come dinner time, Sup Noodle Bar is packed until closing, and you’ll want to take your time slurping down the pho. The small restaurant is located off Buena Park’s stretch of Beach Boulevard, our very own K-Town (a.k.a. Buena Korea), equipped with eateries offering all-you-can-eat Korean barbecue), Korean fried chicken, dumplings and more. It’s become such the hotspot that Koreatown hot shots now frequently open an OC branch here (e.g., Kang Ho-Dong Baekjeong). Wholly ours for the time being is Sup Noodle Bar, serving up Asian fusion fare. Start with an order of golden bao, Vietnamese fried pork dumplings stuffed with caramelized onions, minced mushroom, Chinese sausage and a hard-boiled egg. It’s a Viet twist on a scotch egg—sweet, savory and great for sharing. Other bites include crispy garlic-and-parmesan chicken wings, Korean barbecue gyoza (beef and chap chae gyoza served with spicy garlic soy), shaken house fries, light but tasty shrimp (or tofu) spring rolls, and skinny fries topped with shaken beef, garlic, caramelized onions, Cheddar cheese and spicy tartar sauce. But you are here to eat a pho that simmers for

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Photastic Broth

CYNTHIA REBOLLEDO

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food» LET THE MIXING BEGIN

CYNTHIA REBOLLEDO

Hard to Beat Roasted beet salad at El Mercado Modern Cuisine

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oughage isn’t usually our go-to when dining at El Mercado Modern Cuisine. Instead, we usually order succulent carnitas, spicy-plump aguachiles or delicious taco flights. But chef Bryan Bustos’ roasted beet salad has changed all that. Bustos’ creation combines roasted wedges of beets with dollops of golden beet purée, placing them upon a crescentshaped bed of wild arugula dressed in lemon and oil. The greens are served along-

EATTHISNOW

» CYNTHIA REBOLLEDO side a vibrant circle of beet purée that’s meant to be used as a dressing. Mix everything up to create a colorful winter salad! EL MERCADO MODERN CUISINE 301 N. Spurgeon St., Santa Ana, (714) 338-2446; www.mercadomodern.com.

DRINKOFTHEWEEK

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JA NU A RY 12- 18 , 20 18

» NICK SCHOU

16

J Vineyards Cuvee 20 and Brut Rosé

W

hen your wife starts a new job right after New Year’s Day and you’re looking to start a new wine column (stay tuned for Half-Corked), nothing could be more timely than a couple of bottles of fine sparkling wine. I’ve never been a big fan of champagne, but I’ve grown to love a refreshing prosecco or cava. That said, California has some tremendous sparkling wines to offer. Although the Russian River Valley’s most famous bubbly-specific wine-maker is probably Korbel, J Vineyards in nearby Healdsburg has been making sparkling varietals since 1986.

of which combine chardonnay, pinot noir and pinot meunier grapes and pair nicely with chilled seafood. The bottles typically sell for $38 and $45, respectively, but they’re now on sale for closer to $30 and $35 at Hi-Time Wine Cellars. Lucky you!

THE DRINK J Vineyards has produced a pair of fine blends with its Cuvee 20 and Brut Rosé, both

Available at Hi-Time Wine Cellars, 250 Ogle St., Costa Mesa, (949) 650-8463; www.hitimewine.net.

COURTESY OF J VINEYARDS

NSCHOU@OCWEEKLY.COM


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Sew It Goes

I

Daniel Day-Lewis’ ‘last’ film is a strange, unlikely romantic comedy By aImee murIllo

Krieps), a young, spirited woman who smiles away her embarrassment of stumbling at a countryside inn. She’s immediately drawn to Reynolds, too; after taking his lengthy meal order, she leaves him a flirty note, calling him a “hungry boy.” Inspired by Alma’s youthful features and presence, Reynolds takes her measurements on their first date so as to make a dress for her (but not without throwing in a few casual barbs at her bustline and physique); she soon becomes his full-time model, live-in assistant and muse. As narrated in a late-night, intimate conversation that becomes a throughline for the film, Alma falls in love with Reynolds, and their creative collaboration complements their courtship. Food and the color purple serve as recurring motifs and innuendo. But just as quickly as her love grows, Alma’s own carefree personality begins to bristle against that of Reynolds, causing disruption to his exacting demeanor. When Alma decides to plan a nice surprise dinner for Reynolds, he cruelly expresses his distaste for the jolt in his schedule. Alma then cleverly concocts

a scheme to rein in Reynolds for his own good—which leads to the most gratifying overturn of his domineering persona and the biggest twist of the film. Reynolds’ fussy, cantankerous disposition wears on the viewer’s senses, but it’s easier to sit through thanks to Day-Lewis. Anyone who knows anything about the actor knows he immerses himself in his roles (for this film, he apprenticed under Marc Happel, the costume director for the New York City Ballet), so there’s obvious parallels in both men’s approach to their crafts. In Reynolds’ moments of contentment and peace, there’s a wistful gleam in Day-Lewis’ eye that lures us in, a bolt of lightning that hits as he furrows his brow in concentration. (Prior to the film’s release, Day-Lewis announced his retirement from acting onscreen, and if it’s true, it will be a real shame.) Krieps is a brilliant match for Day-Lewis, and her calm demeanor shows both strength and winsomeness. As I try to recalibrate my understanding of the film, it’s hard to fall in love with Phantom Thread’s vision of love. Alma, a headstrong young lady who knows how

to make the right moves, is just a mannequin to Reynolds throughout much of the movie, fulfilling the trope of muse to a demanding creator, a theme that has been done to exhaustion. Although she has agency, Alma’s a less manic Manic Pixie Dream Girl into whose origin or life outside the House of Woodcock we are given no insight. And save for one small interaction, Phantom Thread won’t pass any Bechdel tests. If anything, Phantom Thread is a comedic love story with a strange, perverse twist, dressed up as an illustrious period drama à la Downton Abbey and The Crown. But despite the sumptuous meal of exquisite performances, Anderson’s humor and a beautiful costume design, I was, like Reynolds, a “hungry boy” who was left wanting more. AMURILLO@OCWEEKLY.COM PHANTOM THREAD was written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson; and stars Daniel Day-Lewis, Vicky Krieps and Lesley Manville. Opens nationwide Jan. 19.

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f I had walked into Phantom Thread knowing the film was a romantic comedy, I would have had a much different, less confusing experience. Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest feature film has touches of The Master in that both films focus on an obsessive creator whose world is altered by the arrival of a newcomer. Here, that creator is Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis). As head of London’s House of Woodcock, Reynolds is the master dressmaker (loosely based on obsessive fashion designer Cristobal Balenciaga) whose designs grace the bodies of Europe’s elite and nobility in the 1950s, but as with any artist, he is sensitive and mercurial. His delicate being is managed and protected by his sister, Cyril (Lesley Manville), who keeps him to a monk-like, finely tuned routine. The slightest disagreement is, to him, an attack on his creative genius. But we’re led to believe his testy personality is worth it, as his gowns are so gorgeous and pristine they transform his clients into queens. Reynolds’ world changes the minute he sets eyes on young waitress Alma (Vicky

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HIS LAST (ONSCREEN) ROMANCE?

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| classifieds | music | culture | film | food | calendar | feature | the county | contents JAN UA RY 12-18, 2 01 8

Female victimization and childhood trauma inform a muddled show at Grand Central Art Center BY DAVE BARTON

D

POPPIES, POPPIES, POPPIES!

COURTESY OF GRAND CENTRAL ART CENTER

experiences. A listing of the subjects involved—bullying, military trauma, childhood sexual abuse and poverty—is more interesting than the end result, with most of the interviews too brief or poorly edited to pack much of a punch. The next gallery offers an admonition of another sort. Thick green stalks of Starbucks straws poke up from the impossibly lush artificial landscaping covering the floor of Rebecca Chernow: #superbloom, stiff and rigid like lawn darts. Atop the straws are rippled pieces of orange plastic bag, creating a room-size installation, a mini-mountain of plastic poppies in waves leading to a peak at the corner. The wall behind is painted in oranges, yellows and purples, a solitary “flower” looking as if it has been stepped on, crushed into the “grass” under the evocative “sunset.” The flurry of images that come to mind while admiring it is no mean feat for such a small space. There’s the moment from The Wizard of Oz, with Dorothy and two of her three compatriots drifting into a sleepy death, the third watching in helpless horror. There’s the cartoonish quality of the design, hearkening to the brief moments of childhood, when a handful of trash could create an imaginary world. There’s the irony of a long-lasting pollutant imitating the ephemeral natural life of something beautiful, as well as the short, temporary time the installation

is scheduled at the gallery. Planned as a reminder of the brief, colorful life of the 2017 super-bloom in the Antelope Valley, post-drought, before a glut of tourists thoughtlessly trampled and trashed them in callous admiration, it’s impossible to put aside the flower’s history as an item mourning the brutalities of war. While many of those references have dark implications, John Spiak’s curatorial notes indicate Chernow’s immersive art is aiming at something more positive, primarily a focus on environmental issues and renewability. For me, the historical link of flowers to femininity, as well as the poppy’s link to pain relief and healing, fits well within the context of the last year’s politics. As with the flowers that mysteriously appeared after a decade-long dry spell, the female-centered activist community, full of rage and beauty, has arisen. Spiak’s note to preserve the Grant Central Art Center’s installation by “staying on the path” seems a wink and a nod to the many “flowers” yet to bloom in 2018. “REBECCA CHERNOW: #SUPERBLOOM” & “MAYA GURANTZ: DEIPNOPHOROI” at Grand Central Art Center, 125 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, (714) 567-7233; www. grandcentralartcenter.com. Open Tues.Thurs., 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fri.-Sat., 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun., 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Chernow’s installation closes Jan. 14; Gurantz’s closes Feb. 11. Free.

A

s much as women love dressing up to look good, we also dress up to express ourselves and project an image that represents our personality. In the professional world, there’s no look that so dramatically projects personal success than the power suit: a blazer with matching pants or skirt. While power suits are brilliant signifiers of the white-collar world, it’s time to make them a staple for occasions as informal as going out on the town with friends or hitting up that art-show opening. For one thing, women’s power suits have come a long way since the 1980s—they’re less stiff, softer in the shoulders and more individualistic. For another, after coming out of the dreck of 2017—uplifted though it was by Women’s Marches, the Me Too movement and ongoing discussions on wage gaps in almost every trade—a power suit is a bold statement that reclaims one’s confidence, produces positive outward vibrations and presents an overall vibe of unfuckwithableness wherever you go. Fashion is one of the few modes of agency we women have; we should use it to set cosmic intentions for our own empowerment. If you’ve never considered where to cop suits that fit well and hardly need any tailoring, Zara (www.zara.com) is a good place to start, thanks to its variety of styles, colors and chic fits. Prism Boutique (406 Termino Ave., Long Beach, 562-433-4341; www.prismboutique.com) offers a matching red blazer and bottoms from Flynn Skye that’s emblazoned with a tulip pattern for an extra touch of femininity and cool. Although more wellknown for its millennial-centric body-con dresses, Nasty Gal (www.nastygal.com) offers suits consisting of flashier material and wider pant legs for a 21st century update. Look out, 2018; this is our year! AMURILLO@OCWEEKLY.COM

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eipnophobia is the fear of dinner conversation. Deipnophoroi are women who prepared food and offered a sympathetic ear to young boys and girls during ancient Greek celebrations commemorating the ritual slaughter of young people by the Minotaur. Maya Gurantz’s Deipnophoroi has nothing to do with food preparation. Rather, it’s about food for thought, tackling subjects that most people would nix at the dinner table. A diptych video collaboration with several female storytellers and artists, all of them mothers, it offers advice on what to do when being raped, kidnapped or dismembered, the narration playing on one screen accompanied by child-like, chroma-keyed illustrations playing on the other. From the Brothers Grimm to George Lucas, trauma is commonplace in the stories we tell our children, but paranoia and morality aren’t the agenda here— this is about self-preservation. While a mother’s advice to her children—female and male—under such extreme circumstances is worth being examined in an art piece, not only does the installation play into the idea of women being helpless and victimized, but there’s also the elephant in the living room that goes unaddressed: National Institute of Justice statistics are that men are more likely to be victims of violence than women. Those issues aside, it’s also just not very good. The video installation offers very powerful advice about staying calm in chaotic circumstances, but what doesn’t work is its haphazard, piecemeal use of fairy tales, without any real insight; its moments of pretense; and the sloppiness of much of its production value. If Gurantz had placed a greater emphasis on curation, giving the stronger writing and performance more emphasis and eliminating the amateur hour aspects, cheap production value would have been a nonissue. The poorly framed and poorly lit photography, less an aesthetic choice than a lack of skill, works against many—but not all—of the discussions, undercutting their intensity and focus. When the stories go for a more personal jugular, unhampered by distancing effects and gimmicks, just a woman facing the camera and sharing her admonishment, you can literally feel the hair rise on the back of your neck. Too bad those bluntforce moments are so few and far between. Gurantz runs into similar quality issues with the accompanying single-channel video Non-Fiction, a series of short interviews with mothers about their personal

Suit Yourself

MO NT H XX–X X, 2 0 14

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Me Too, But Not You

» AIMEE MURILLO

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culture»art|stage|style

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Golden Bear Memories

A longtime employee of the legendary music venue recalls its heyday

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Lively Waterfront Pub with full menu of house-made great food & dog friendly patio!

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LAST DAYS OF THE oleen Hansen BEAR, CIRCA 1986 was a freshman at Orange Coast College when she started her decade-long career at the Golden Bear nightclub in Huntington Beach. As with many great opportunities in life, her time at the legendary venueby-the-sea happened quite by accident. “I heard the radio in the student center announce a new club opening,” she recalls of that day in COURTESY THE ORANGE COUNTY ARCHIVES November 1963. “It was supposed to be folk music, and we all went out to the other [folk] clubs. It ester ow turned out the advertisement date was wrong, and we went down there, and they » taylor hamby were closed!” The venue wouldn’t actually open until two days later (featuring exotica icon Les hung all the way down. She’d just grab the Baxter with a young David Crosby), but audience by their throat.” while she was there, she spoke to owners While working there from 1963 to 1974 Delbert Kauffman and Jim “Ry” Ryerson. (or ’75—“I’m really not sure at this point; Realizing they probably needed someone it was a really long time ago”), Hansen to handle their marketing better, they befriended José Feliciano and watched a offered Hansen a job on the spot. young Steve Martin work on his balloonAccording to Hansen, this false start animal routine. “I got so sick of those was indicative of the lackadaisical way the damn balloons. He’d be doing it offstage, club was run in the early ’60s. “When I in the kitchen—it drove me nuts!” she first came in there, it was a mess,” Hansen remembers with a chuckle. remembers of the club’s finances. “I was By the early 1970s, the Bear, limited by hired as a forensic bookkeeper.” its small capacity, struggled to book the By 1966, Kauffman had reportedly run caliber of acts that had made it famous. the club into the ground and left to join a The folk craze of the early 1960s was long commune in Oregon. George Nikas then over, and several of the more notable acts bought the business. While Kauffman the club hosted when they were on the and his crew were responsible for the folk brink of stardom were now too big and years, Nikas brought in the club’s golden expensive to book again. In 1974, Nikas era of live entertainment. Under his called it quits and sold the club to its final ownership, the 300-person venue hosted owners: brothers Rick and Chuck BabiJanis Joplin, Neil Young, Jackson Browne, racki and Rick’s wife, Carole. Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Richie Not too fond of the new ownership, Havens, and more. “We were the first club Hansen quit soon after. The Babiracki to have Janis Joplin or any psychedelic era brought in acts such as the Ramones, music in Southern California,” recalls Jerry Garcia, Tom Waits, Muddy Waters Hansen. “A lot of the owners were a little and Patti Smith. The owners even discovleery about it because of the drugs. . . . ered a then budding artist named Wyland, [Joplin] was so nice. I did have a little talk the whale guy, and got him to do the large with her about keeping the pot out of the music mural on the side of the building. [building]—we didn’t want to get busted. Now in her 70s, Hansen leads a quiAnd she said, ‘Oh, okay, I’ll go out and do eter life as a full-time seamstress and it outside.’ part-time thrift-store enthusiast. The “When she got onstage, it was like Golden Bear was demolished in 1986. lighting a fire under her,” Hansen continIn a fate befitting its Huntington Beach ues. “All of a sudden, she just bloomed. home, a large surf shop now sits upon The band was so good everybody just the hallowed ground. YESTERNOW@OCWEEKLY.COM stopped and didn’t move and their jaws

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Queen Calafia? Laguna Art Museum’s California-Mexico PST exhibits set to close

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alifornia’s real history—not the abbreviated one we were taught in elementary school in which nothing existed before Junipero Serra showed up—is told in “California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820-1930” at Laguna Art Museum (LAM). Part of the larger “Pacific Standard Time (PST): Latin American and Latino Art in LA,” the paintings tell the story of Alta California, its violent move from Mexico to the U.S., its burgeoning identity as the Golden State, and the mighty influence of Mexican artists on Californians. Spurred by a novel published in 1500, Spanish conquistadores longed for California, an island ruled by the warrior queen Calafia. But she didn’t seem to be represented in any of the hundreds of paintings in this bilingual exhibit. Not in 1822’s Games of the Inhabitants of California or the battle paintings in the War, Gold and Statehood section. She wasn’t among the snorting horses, lassoed cattle and mustachioed women of the Ranchos & Vaqueros era. Nor in José Agustin Arrietta’s 1870 Still Life, with dead chicken, goblet, gourd, avocado, olives and tasty vegies. Curators Katherine E. Manthorne and Alberto Nulman borrowed from far and wide, thanks to the PST grants, filling the entire first floor of the museum and part of the second. While only a handful of the paintings come from LAM’s permanent collection, two were among my favorites. Mission San Gabriel (circa 1832) by Ferdinand Deppe is the museum’s oldest possession, painted when the independent Mexican government stripped the missions of their land. We see a panorama of the idealized mission world we visualized as kids, with its rulers and Indian workers, a palm tree in the foreground and snowcapped mountains beyond. Fifty years of neglect later, the novel Ramona launched the Mission Romance era, when the dilapidated buildings of the missions became hot destinations. Calafia is definitely not in the row of mini-brides at Mission San Juan Capistrano in Confirmation Class (1897). Dorr Bothwell’s Translation From the Maya places the artist’s sources front and center. A hand, a plant and a coiled, fanged snake are partially depicted in abstracted form in front of a white slab, the objects continuing beyond the confines of the slab in a style unique to the artist. Simultaneously, we see the artist’s love of Mayan-inspired design and its transformation into her own style. Bothwell lived to the age of 98, traveling the world to study indigenous art and design. During the Depression, she painted

TRANSLATION FROM THE MAYA

DORR BOTHWELL/ LAGUNA ART MUSEUM COLLECTION

PAINTITBLACK » LISA BLACK

murals for the Federal Arts Project in LA, her work greatly influenced by Mexican muralists. “California Mexicana” makes clear how los tres grandes—Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco—impacted the work of artists in both countries from the 1920s on, with their exceptional skill at “distilling history into key encounters between individuals.” Translation From the Maya hangs in the Cross-Border Modernism room, along with works by los tres grandes and their collaborators and protégées. Looming over Women of Oaxaca and Spring in Coyoacan is a near-life-size replica of the main wall of Rivera’s Allegory of California, his first U.S. fresco. In it, a giant figure presides over the state’s abundance. Finally, Calafia herself—updated with the face of an athlete; Rivera’s model was Olympic tennis medalist Helen Wills Moody. Happily, a record number of kids, mostly fourth graders, have visited the exhibit, according to Cody Lee, director of communications. So the next generation will truly know their California history. Another PST exhibit, “Dan McCleary: Prints From Oaxaca,” also closes Sunday. Don’t miss either. LBLACK@OCWEEKLY.COM “CALIFORNIA MEXICANA” AND “DAN MCCLEARY” at Laguna Art Museum, 307 Cliff Dr., Laguna Beach, (949) 494-8971; lagunaartmusuem. org. Thurs., 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; Fri.-Tues., 11 a.m.5 p.m. Closes Sun. $7.


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music»artists|sounds|shows THEY ARE THE FOUR

That’s Gonna Leave a Mark

JAY VISIONS

OC hip-hop group Four Finger Ring come out swinging in 2018

I

t was the last performance on the final night of Seattle Hempfest, and the crowd’s energy was burnt like the ash at the tip of a joint. Winding down the country’s longest-running, three-day legalization rally (a.k.a. “Protestival” or “Disneyland for Stoners”) on the waterfront of Myrtle Edwards Park, tired hippies began their sleepy trek home or, more likely, to the nearest hot dog stand— right as OC hip-hop group Four Finger Ring was about to take the stage. “We were like, ‘Man this is gonna be shitty,’” recalls rapper Mic Moses. “I was trippin’, for sure,” confirms his rapping cohort C4mula. But something amazing happened when Moses, C4mula, Nu3tron and DJ Zole stepped onstage. They turned up the sound system and let their bombastic brand of bars and beats bring the fest back to life. The fleeing crowd turned around and slowly returned to the main stage. “When we stepped out onstage, there were two hippies on the lawn,” Nu3tron says. “But by the time we got into our third song, there were 1,000 people standing in front of us.” This gravitational pull toward the group’s mix of stoner humor, slicing syllabic wordplay and refreshing eclecticism (including some EDM-infused bangers) has grown stronger lately. After more than a decade honing their skills separately in OC’s hip-hop scene, the

By NaTe JacksoN three MCs and their DJ combined forces, releasing rapid-fire videos and songs pronouncing their arrival to those who’ve slept on them. Now Four Finger Ring finally feels as though they’re about to hit big. It’s a momentum that started in 2016, when the four individuals decided to ball their energy together into a fist of OC hip-hop fury. When we say “OC hip-hop,” please disregard the tired cliché of white-bred, wannabe gangstas—it’s 2018, folks. Hip-hop culture, even in the ’burbs, has evolved quite a bit over the past few years. Instead, think of it as a wide swath of influences that can be sponged up and wrung out into a melting pot of dexterous rhymes, party anthems and political messages poured over innovative beats. Production-wise, Four Finger Ring’s growth isn’t so much about their rhymes as it is their ability to write good songs. Braggadocious bars notwithstanding, what most fans first notice about their slew of singles (including tracks such as “Dead Rose,” “Bass Heads” and “Not Like Us”) is how cohesive they feel despite working with producers from OC to the U.K. “Instead of just grabbing whatever was on the table, we found people, and some people found us, and we gravitated toward each other,” C4mula says. “There’s one producer from the U.K., Skortix, who made us some awesome grime shit; Jim Perkins with Roshambo Studios and

Zole’s always making beats, so he made us some dope shit.” All four members came with a wealth of material and enough experience crafting their own albums, several of which the Weekly has written about over the years. The group dynamic is only enhancing their output, as they prepare to release a staggering 45 tracks and a slew of new videos. The yeoman’s work of stockpiling songs over the past several months at their label Lip Drum Entertainment in Santa Ana is a daily routine, a change from how they’ve written albums in the past. “It wasn’t one thing, like a broken heart, that inspired this record,” Nu3tron says. “Maybe one of us did suffer that in the last year or two, but as the emotions come and the songs come, that’s how this album got made.” On a recent Sunday afternoon, C4mula, Moses and Nu3tron are sitting in front of a glowing computer monitor at Lip Drum’s studio space, bouncing in their chairs as they play back some of their latest tracks, several of which will be released on their forthcoming mixtape WTF (We Are the Four), the first in a series of offerings beginning this month. The continuous plume of steam from a humidifier fills the room like incense. A mysterious white casket is fixed against the wall, a leftover prop from their video for “Dead Rose,” released in September. Even with the funeral vibes, the studio is

alive with the energy of the crew getting lit to their own shit. The new songs they play during the session run the gamut from soul-sampled, big-beat bangers à la Boi -1Da to explosive London grime and island-inspired rapreggae fusion on a track featuring Jared Watson of the Dirty Heads. With all the styles they’ve managed to layer into their new sound, Moses says, he’s never felt as strongly about any music he’s created as he does with this project. “So many artists are releasing records just to release records,” he says. “You put it out, but you’re not behind the record 110 percent. I think now, since we’ve been working together, this record shows we all feel very strongly and confident about our sound.” Part of that confidence is knowing their power comes from the hope that somewhere in the avalanche of songs they’re about to spring on us this year is a hit waiting to be heard every time they take the stage. “Recently, we got a call from the Observatory to come down and do an opening set for one of their shows, like an hour before we were supposed to go on,” Nu3tron says. “They’re like, ‘Are you guys ready?’ and we’re like, ‘Of course, we’re ready.’ We’d already been practicing, so we stepped onstage and just destroyed it. We’ve been ready.” NJACKSON@OCWEEKLY.COM


RUN TO THE HILLS! COURTESY OF RED RIVER MASSACRE

Let It Run RED RIVER MASSAC RE perform with Core 10, ORKEST and Project Human at Alex’s Bar, 2913 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach, (562) 434-8292; www.alexsbar. com. Thurs., Jan. 11, 8 p.m. $10. 21+.

T

» brett callwood

Hey, Orange County/Long Beach musicians & bands! Mail your music, contact info, high-res photos & impending show dates for possible review to: Locals Only, OC Weekly, 18475 Bandilier Circle, Fountain Valley, CA 92708. Or email your link to: localsonly@ocweekly.com.

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ence of preference between LA and OC fans. “A lot of the kids playing metal in LA also come from a punk background,” he says. “There’s a hint of punk in there. It’s mainly Mexican-American kids like myself, who grew up listening to Slayer, Pantera, Metallica, Cannibal Corpse and stuff like that, and just evolve it to where they’re making it their own. It’s a really cool thing that’s going on up here, and it gravitates to social economics. It’s usually people in the lower bracket who seem to be attracted to more extreme music. As opposed to Orange County— there’s a different attitude that I notice. I have lots of friends who live there, and everybody’s into that atmospheric death metal, which is a lot slower, way more melodic, prettier, almost a bit more palatable. It might have to do with the scenery.” Hernandez says the Red River Massacre set for their upcoming performance at Alex’s Bar in Long Beach is full of energy and screaming, with Irish’s crazy banjo that “bites your ear.” “We’re going to play a lot of our new songs,” he says. “We’ve been working on a couple of new songs that are not on the album. All the other ones are gonna be on the album. We’re gonna exclusively change one song from the album version— from a speed-punk metal song to more of a Melvinsesque song. We won’t record it that way ever.” In the new year, the band hope to play more not only in LA and OC, but also the Bay Area and beyond. “We’ve been talking about how to expand our horizons a little bit,” Hernandez says. “It’s also a little hard for us because Keith has a family, Jeremy has a business (the Dark Art Emporium in Long Beach), and my brother and I also work. So it’s difficult to get everyone’s schedule together, to go ahead and tour and do something major like travel. But we’re putting our heads together. . . . It’s very exciting.”

J AN UA RY 1 2- 1 8, 20 1 8

he concept of a spaghetti western-themed sludge-metal band is so inspired in its simplicity, so tremendously appropriate that one has to wonder why there aren’t more such bands out there. It took Red River Massacre—a band with members spread across Orange County, Long Beach and Los Angeles—to make the connection. The group formed when brothers Miguel and Adriel Hernandez (guitar and drums, respectively) hooked up with Keith Irish (vocals, banjo) and Jeremy Schott (bass) at the start of the decade. There aren’t many bands that list both English grind-metallers Bolt Thrower and SoCal surf legend Dick Dale among their influences, but such is the eclecticism of the Red River Massacre sound. Simply put, if you add banjo to thrash metal, magic will happen. “Keith picked up the banjo and started messing around with it, and then the addition of electric guitar and drums adds a different dynamic to it,” says Miguel Hernandez. “We wanted to take scores, like from Ennio Morricone, and just kind of add heavy guitars to it, make it sludgy and doomy and epic.” In addition to their self-titled EP on Spotify, the band recently finished recording their first fulllength album with producer Billy Anderson, who previously worked with the Melvins and Sleep; it’s currently in the mastering process and should be released early this year. The lyrical subject matter will touch on those spaghetti-western themes, as well as so much more. “We started off writing more western-themed things, stories that could translate into a story of a tragedy or a death, à la Marty Robbins, a singer from the 1950s and ’60s,” says Hernandez. “Then we get political, too. . . . There’s also the nonsensical bullshit in there, talking about nothing except death or something like that—bullshit ideas that just come together for the sake of putting lyrics together.” Though the band members are spread across the region, they keep in touch with all of the local metal scenes. Hernandez observes there’s a differ-

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The Soft White Sixties embrace their heritage with a bilingual album

T

here’s no question that the shock and aftermath of the 2016 election is still being felt. The tentacles of Donald Trump’s election have infiltrated the music world, and with threats of a border wall not going away, Latino outfits have had reason to feel anxious. Groove-laden rock outfit the Soft White Sixties moved down the coast from the Bay Area in early 2016, but following Trump’s victory, their creative instincts sprung into action. In the midst of recording a new album, singer Octavio Genera wrote two versions of the same song: “Brick By Brick” and its Spanish counterpart, “Piedra a Piedra.” The single, released last September, includes such bold lyrics as “If you build a wall/we’re going to tear it down/ brick by brick.” “The thing was that this is the only song [of the band’s] that addresses anything political,” Genera says. “Our stories are usually about what’s going on around us. There’s something powerful about having the song [also] in Spanish that makes it more meaningful.” The band have been in the studio with producer Elijah Thomson for the past year, breaking here and there to allow for Thomson’s duties as Father John Misty’s touring bassist. But the effort is nearly complete, with only a few things left to do. “When we went into the studio, we didn’t have any finished songs, just grooves and riffs,” Genera says. “All of the songs we have with Eli we did all together in the same room. Then we went back and worked on melodies and lyrics.” Just like their contemporaries, the Soft White Sixties feel obligated to tell stories that will cut across all cultures. And as with the aforementioned single, the new album will also be recorded both in English and

BY DANIEL KOHN in Spanish. “I think it’s more impactful for people to hear it in both languages,” Genera says. “Even if they don’t speak Spanish, they can still appreciate the songs. “For me, growing up being MexicanAmerican, we really didn’t have that many people to look to who wanted to do music,” the singer adds. “You have people like Ritchie Valens and the guys from the ’60s, and it’s really small. Then you have the guys from the Mars Volta. But my theory is that [there are] guys like me listening to hip-hop and rock & roll in English, and now those people are making bands. Serving this unrepresented community felt right.” According to Genera, the band want both versions of the album to be accessible to listeners. “It was a lot of work to make it right, with rhythms and such, and to make the lyrics match up without simplifying it,” he says. Recently, the band did a two-week tour behind the release “Brick By Brick”/“Piedra a Piedra.” “We wanted to go on a quick run before everything slow[ed] down in December,” Genera says. “We wanted to get out to places where we’ve been before and have support.” If that single is an indication of what’s to come, 2018 is shaping up to be a big year for the Soft White Sixties, with their flashy, groove-heavy rock album ready to go. Genera is excited for the not-too-distant future. “We have a lot of work when we get back home,” he says, “but the album is some really good growth from us that we’re excited to put out.” THE SOFT WHITE SIXTIES perform with Guards and Veronica Bianqui at the Echo, 1822 W. Sunset, Los Angeles, (213) 413-8200; www.spacelandpresents. com. Thurs., Jan. 18, 8 p.m. $9.50 in advance; $12.50 at the door. 21+.


Worms Turn I’m a 67-year-old gay man. After a breakup 15 years ago, I believed the possibility of emotional and sexual intimacy with a partner was over for me. Then a couple of months ago, my desire for sexual contact increased dramatically. For the first time, I began using apps, and I felt like the proverbial kid in a candy store; it seemed strangely similar to when I first came out in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood in the early 1970s. Also, I was surprised—not unpleasantly—by the whole Daddy phenomenon, never imagining that this old face and body would interest younger men. You can probably guess what happened next: I was contacted by a 22-year-old man who revealed himself to be mature, intelligent, sweet and, fatally, the physical type that arouses me most. I fell hard, and he seems to like me, too. Am I a creep? A fool? Is my judgment impaired? Dumb And Daddy

» dan savage

there. So enjoy this while it lasts, and if things start to get creepy—if he starts shopping for an apartment in Bucharest—then you’ll have to pull the plug. But if this turns into a loving, lasting, healthy, unconventional LTR, DAD, then one day, he’ll get to pull your plug. (When that day comes, which hopefully won’t be for a long, long time.) Someone at work—not my boss—asked me to fuck his wife. He’s a nice guy, his wife is hot, and I’m single. This is a first for me. Besides STI status, what questions should I ask? Help Interested Straight Boy Understand Lust’s Limitations

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naughty!

1. “Are you a cuckold, or is this a hot-wife thing?” (Considering your sign-off, HISBULL, either you’ve assumed he’s a cuckold or he’s told you he is one. If he is a cuck, he may want dirty texts and pictures—or he’ll want to be in the room where it happens. Is that okay with you?) 2. “Have you done this before?” (The reality of another person sleeping with your up-to-now-monogamous spouse can dredge up intense emotions, e.g., jealousy, sadness, anger, rage. If they’ve done this before and enjoyed it, you can jump right in. If they haven’t, maybe start with a make-out session at a time or in a place where you can’t progress to sex.) 3. “Can I speak directly with your wife?” (You’ll want to make sure she isn’t doing this under duress and that she’s into you, and you’ll want to independently verify the things he’s told you about their arrangement, health, experiences, etc.)

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I recently started seeing a gorgeous 24-year-old woman who’s smart and sweet and also happens to have a few out-there fetishes. There’s not much I’ll say no to, Dan, but one of the things she’s into is formicophilia (a sexual interest in being crawled on or nibbled by insects). I offered to get some ants and worms to crawl on her body while I fuck her, but she wants me to put earthworms in her vagina. Is there a safe way to do this? Female condom? I want to help, but putting worms in your vagina seems as if it will end with an embarrassing trip to the ER. Worries Over Really Messy Scenario

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“I thought I had heard everything,” said Dr. Jen Gunter, an OB/GYN in San Francisco. “Apparently not.” Dr. Gunter, “Twitter’s resident gynecologist,” first went viral when she urged women not to put jade eggs in their vaginas, just one of the many idiocies pushed by the idiots at Goop, Gwyneth Paltrow’s idiotic “lifestyle” website. Last week, Dr. Gunter had to urge women and men not to shoot coffee up their butts, also recommended by Goop. So I thought she might have something to say about stuffing earthworms in your girlfriend’s vagina. “This is obviously unstudied,” Dr. Gunter said, “but anything that lives in soil could easily inoculate the vagina with pathogenic bacteria. Also, I am not sure what earthworm innards could do to the vagina, but I am guessing the worms would get squished and meet an untimely demise during sex. How would you get the pieces of dead earthworm out of her vagina? I can think of a lot of ways this could go very wrong. I would advise against it.” I’m with Dr. Gunter (and, no doubt, PETA): Don’t stuff earthworms in your girlfriend’s vagina. That said, WORMS, tucking a few earthworms into a female condom and carefully inserting it into your girlfriend’s vagina without shoving your cock in there, too . . . is a thoroughly disgusting thing to contemplate and blech. But while it would most likely kill the earthworms (maybe switch ’em out for gummy worms at the last second?), it probably wouldn’t damage your girlfriend or land you both in the ER. Even so, WORMS, don’t do it. Because blech. Read Dr. Gunter’s blog (drjengunter.wordpress.com), follow her on Twitter (@DrJenGunter), and check out her new column in The New York Times (The Cycle).

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The sexy “Daddy” thing—which has always been with us—seems to be undergoing a resurgence. Perhaps our omnipresent, abusive, orange father figure is giving us all daddy issues that are manifesting (in some) as a burning desire to service kinder, sexier, more benevolent daddies. Or perhaps the internet is to blame—not for creating more people interested in intergenerational sex and/or romance, but for making it easier for people to anonymously seek out the kind of sex and kinds of sex partners they truly want. Even if the initial looking is anonymous, DAD, discussing one’s desires with others who share them helps people grow more comfortable with their desires and themselves—nothing melts away shame quite like knowing you’re not alone—and more people are coming out about their non-normative sexual desires, partner preferences, relationship models, etc., than ever before. That said, DAD, if the affections of a consenting adult 40-plus years your junior is your particular perk of aging, go ahead and enjoy it. Keep your expectations realistic (a successful STR is likelier than a successful LTR), don’t do anything stupid (see Father Clements, below), and reacquaint yourself with my constantly updated and revised Campsite Rule: When there’s a significant age and/ or experience gap, the older and/or more experienced person has a responsibility to leave the younger and/or less experienced person in better shape than they found them. No unplanned or planned pregnancies, no sexually transmitted infections, no leading the younger partner to believe “forever” is likely. Do what you can to boost their knowledge, skills and self-confidence while you’re together, and do your best to stick the nearly inevitable dismount—the chances that you’ll be together forever are slim, but you can forever be a friend, mentor and resource. While the age difference will creep some out, DAD, that doesn’t mean you’re a creep. Don’t want to be a fool? Don’t do anything foolish (see Father Clements, below). Worried about infatuation-impaired judgment leading you to do something foolish? Ask a few trusted friends to smack you upside the head if you start paying his rent or lending him your credit cards. And just as you don’t want to take advantage of this young man, DAD, you don’t want to be taken advantage of either. We associate age with power, but youth and beauty confer their own kinds of power, and that power can be abused—it can also lead seemingly sensible men to sign their life savings over to 24-year-old Romanian “models.” For example: “A 79-year-old retired priest has been left heartbroken and homeless after his 24-year-old husband left him just after their home was put into his name,” LGBTQ Nation reported. “Philip Clements sold his home in Kent, England, for £214,750, before moving to Romania and purchasing an apartment for the couple to live in in Bucharest. He signed over the property to Florin Marin, so that Marin would have security after he passed away. . . . Marin broke things off just weeks after the apartment was put in his name, and Clements found himself homeless.” Keep Father Clements’ sad story in mind, DAD, but don’t be paralyzed by it. Because there are lots of examples of loving, lasting, non-creepy, non-foolish relationships between partners with significant age gaps out

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195 Position Wanted Interested candidates send resume to: Google LLC., PO Box 26184 San Francisco, CA 94126 Attn: A. Johnson. Please reference job # below:Programmatic Account Strategist (Irvine, CA) Support a portfolio of Google's key accounts. #1615.27977 Exp Incl: digital video platforms; digital ad campaigns; online measurement, ops, & ad netwrks; DSPs & Ad Servers; 1st & 3rd party audience targeting & tech; & bldg & automating reporting dashboards & dvlpng c-level presos. Industrial Engineer (Cypress, CA) Plan and establish utilization of resource for industrial/commercial energy saving products. Bachelor's in Industrial Engineering. Resume to: OMNI Imagine Inc. 10701 Holder St, Cypress, CA 90630 Chief Editor: F/T; e-Sports Magazine: Responsible for the final production of the company; Req. 3 yrs of exp. in job offered or related; Mail resume to: Inven Global English, LLC, 1621 Alton Pkwy Suite 250, Irvine, CA 92606

Siya Inc. d/b/a Sona Enterprises seeks Computer Programmer. BA in CS reqrd. 6 mth exp. in any job title involving working w/comp. algorithms reqd. Automate bus. processes, update comp. programs, fix errors. Work site: Santa Fe Springs, CA. Mail resumes to Sonal Patel, 10233 Palm Dr., Santa Fe Springs, CA 90670.

Computer Systems Engineer (Tustin, CA) Design and develop operational support systems for computer systems. Bachelor's in Computer/Software Engineering related. Resume to: WoongjinInc. 335 Centennial Way #200, Tustin, CA 92780

Senior SAP Solution Developer sought by Applied Medical Resources Corporation, a medical device dvlpr & mftr (dsgn/dvlp/ responsible for full life cycle implmtn of Web DynproABAP). Bach's deg in Comp Sci, Mgmt Info Systems or related IT field or related w/ 5 yrs exp. Job loc: Rancho Santa Margarita, CA. E-mail resume to SAPCAREER@ appliedmedical.com. BRANCH OPERATIONS MANAGER Kaeser Compressors, Inc. seeks Branch Operations Manager. Job is located in Cypress.CA. Must have B.A. degree or equivalent in Business Administration or related field. Apply at www.us.kaeser.com. Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/Disability Market Research Analyst: Apply by mail to JS Alliance Corp., 540 Porter Way, Placentia, CA 92870, attn. President. Graphic Designer: Design mktg & ad materials for co. Req’d: MA in Graphic Design, Design, or Visual Comm. Design. Mail resume: Ho Jung Kim DDS, Inc. 444 N Harbor Blvd #240 Fullerton, CA 92832 Infinity Sales, Inc., Tustin, CA, seeks a FAE (Field Application Engineer) to provide field technical electrical engineering support for complex semiconductor technologies to customers & internal sales engineering teams. M.S.E.E. or related required. Domestic travel required up to 25% of the time. Send resumes to: Robert Flournoy, 20929 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 47455, Woodland Hills, CA 91364. Fashion Merchandiser: Buy fashion merchandise according to latest trends & preferences. Req’d: Bachelor's in Fashion Design, Fashion Merchandising, or related. Job Site: Garden Grove, CA Mail Resume: DMLK INC. 460 N. Euclid St., Anaheim, CA 92801 Systems Engineer Design and develop software applications for municipalities, solve complex applications problems, and system administration issues. Perform systems management and integration functions. BA+5yrs Exp. Job & Resume: Maintstar 28 Hammond, #D, Irvine, CA 92618

CLINICAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE DATA MANAGER sought by Integrium, LLC in Tustin, CA. Monitor the ongoing collection of clinical data informing the Drug Development Team of any drug safety issues arising during and after conducting Clinical Drug Trial. Send resume to: Debbie Mason, Integrium, LLC, 14351 Myford Rd.., Suite A, Tustin CA 92780 Accounting Clerk: Compute, classify, record accounting data into ledger. Req’d: Bachelor's in Bus. Admin., Accounting or related. Mail Resume: Core Pro Advisor 6281 Beach Blvd., Suite 305, Buena Park, CA 90621 CH2M Hill, Inc.; Geotechnical Engineer, Santa Ana, CA: Geotechnical engg include planning & site characterization, design of facilities, & construction inspection. Mail resume to: Shelly Saitta, CH2M HILL, 9191 S. Jamaica St., Englewood, CO 80112; Job ID: 17-CA2102 Acupuncturist: Apply by mail to Ebenezer Wellness Center, Inc., 13071 Brookhurst St., #115, Garden Grove, CA 92844, attn. President. Sr. Business Analyst (Irvine, CA. This position requires 70% domestic travel to clients’ locations across the US. Travel reimbursement including mileage and/or airfare/hotel, etc.): Perform requirements gathering, GAP analysis to map customer’s requirements to Salesforce. Document future state business process. Email resume referencing job code #SBA to UC Innovation, Inc. at jobs@ ucinnovation.com. Engineer II (Injection Molding & Plastics) sought by Applied Medical Resources Corporation, a medical device dvlpr & manufacturer (Research/ integrate/implmt technologies for injection molding/plastics). Bach's deg in Plastics Engr, Materials Engr, Mech Engr, Mfr Engr or rel field w/ 1 yr exp. Job loc: Lake Forest, CA. E-mail resume to CHU@APPLIEDMEDICAL. COM Quest Diagnostics in San Juan Capistrano, CA, seeks Clinical Laboratory Scientists to test, analyze, & report. Req’s: Bach degree or for equiv in Med Tech, Chem, Bio, or rel field; CA State Clinical Laboratory Scientist license (or license eligible). All shifts. Resume to: Jerry.B.Sutton@ questdiagnostics.com. Job Code “CLS”.

Employment

195 Position Wanted

195 Position Wanted

Veterinarian (Newport Beach, CA) Examine animals to detect & determine the nature of diseases/injuries;Treat sick/ injured animals by prescribing medication, setting bones, dressing wounds, or performing surgery; Inform & advise owners about the general care and medical conditions of their pets. 40hrs/wk. Doctor of Veterinary Medicine & Veterinarian License in CA or All requirements for CA Veterinarian License except SSN shall be satisfied. Resume to Companion Animal Medical Care, Inc. Attn. Young Joo Kim, 3720 Campus Dr. #D, Newport Beach, CA 92660

Software Engineer ChasePay Inc (Irvine, CA) seeks a Software Engineer to analyze user reqmt. develop & maintain product payment gateway service. Mail resume to: President, ChasePay Inc – 15440 Laguna Canyon Rd., Ste. 210, Irvine, CA 92618

Director of Pharmacovigilance (Job Location – Irvine, CA) Provide safety strategy to deliver benefit-risk profile; signal detection, evaluation, risk-benefit evaluation, risk management; ensure processing of expeditable adverse events meets reqd standard; manage PVG grp. Reqd. MD & 2 yrs exp. Send Resume to: Spectrum Pharmaceuticals Inc. 11500 S. Eastern Ave, STE 240, Henderson, NV 89052. Clinical Research Coordinator (Anaheim, CA) Plan / coordinate clinical research projects based on clinical research objectives; Record/ maintain clinical data in interventions (medications, medical therapy, devices, etc)' efficacy, safety, correlations & side effect; Analyze clinical data, evaluate research performance/ assess eligibility of potential subjects through reviews of medical records, discussions with health care practitioners, and interviews. 40hrs/wk, Bachelor’s in Healthcare or related req’d. Resume to Advanced Research Center, Inc. Attn. Liao Yewei, 1020 S Anaheim Blvd #316, Anaheim, CA 92805 University of California Irvine RESEARCH DIRECTOR sought by UCI Sue and Bill Gross School of Nursing in Irvine, CA. Organizing, planning, and directing the operations for multiple million-dollar research projects ( currently consisting of NIH funded grants ) with minimal supervision from the Principle Investigator of the research projects. To apply send your resume to kheck<\@>uci.edu reference Job Number 2017-1092. UCI s an E)/AA Employer. Software Engineer (La Palma, CA) Develop, redesign software applications and programs for e-commerce platforms. Master's in Computer/Electronics Engineering or related. Resume to: Cicindelae Inc. 4 Centerpointe Dr #330, La Palma, CA 90623

Software Engineer (La Palma, CA) Develop, redesign software applications and programs for e-commerce platforms. Bachelor's in Computer Science/Engineering related. Resume to: Cicindelae Inc. 4 Centerpointe Dr #330, La Palma, CA 90623 Sr. Auditor: conduct audit, review & prepare reports; BA/BS in accounting; 40hrs/ wk; Apply to Hall & Company CPAs and Consultants, Inc. Attn: HR, 111 Pacifica, Ste. 300, Irvine, CA 92618. Engineering Manager in San Juan Capistrano, CA: Create detailed plans for the development of new products and designs; direct, review, and approve project design changes. BS+5yrs exp. Mail resumes: Regatta Solutions, Inc., Attn: Job ID 6355.01, 27122 Paseo Espada #901, San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675. Market Research Analyst: Conduct market research to identify potential markets. Req’d: Bachelor’s in Bus. Admin., Econ. or related. Mail Resume: Game Cafe Services, Inc. 2152 Dupont Dr., Ste 280, Irvine, CA 92612 Solar PV Designer: Design & manage Solar Photovoltaic systems. Req’d: BE/BS in Electrical Engr. or Nanomaterials Engr. Mail resume: Wegen Solar, Inc. 1511 E Orangethorpe Ave. #D Fullerton, CA 92831 Quality Assurance Mgr: MBA or MA industr. Eng + 3 yrs mngr exp. or BA industr. eng +5 yr exp. Must have 3 yrs exp. in ISO 9001:2000 & large or medium-size co. Monitor quality assurance, production, improvements, test equip, train staff, performance. Some travel req. in US & abroad. Apply HR Rapid Manufacturing 8080 E Crystal Dr, Anaheim CA 92807. Acupuncturist (Anaheim, CA) Diagnose patient's condition based on symptoms & medical history to formulate effective oriental medicine treat plans. Insert very fine needles into acupuncture points on body surface / maintain related care. Apply herbal treatment, acupressure & other therapy for patient's specific needs such as back, neck, shoulder, knee pains, headaches, etc. 40hrs/wk. Master’s in Acupuncture or Oriental Medicine, Acupuncturist License in CA req’d. Resume to Unity Acupuncture Health Clinic Attn: In Chul Song, 5557 E Santa Ana Canyon Rd #207, Anaheim, CA 92807

Sr. SAP MM Consultant, MS deg. in CIS, IT, MIS or related & 1 yr exp. Exp. in Supply Chain Optimization. Skills: SAP MM, Tableau Reporting & Analysis ,VBA, SQL, MS Visio, Six Sigma Methodology. Travel &/or reloc. throughout the US req'd. Mail resume to Morris & Willner Partners, Inc., 201 Sandpointe Ave, Ste. 200, Santa Ana, CA, 92707 Accountant: Prepare acct. rec’d & financial rpts & tax returns. Req’d: BA/BS in Bus. Admin., Finance, or Acct. Mail resume: Kim & Co CPA, An Accountancy Corporation 1214 W Commonwealth Ave Fullerton, CA 92833 Sr. Financial Analyst, F/T, Min Master Degree in Finance or related; Job & Interview in Santa Ana, CA; Mail Resume to: AG Appliance Repair, Inc. 2716 South Grand Ave. Santa Ana, CA 92705. Pacific Quality Packaging Corp. seeks Process Engineer. Mstr. in Engin. reqd. Improve manuf. processes, resolve production problems. Work site: Brea, CA. Mail resumes to 660 Neptune Avenue, Brea, CA 92821.

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OC3: Too Many Great Deals to List Check Out Many Deals on Display Ad! 3122 Halladay St. Santa Ana 92705 714-754-1348 oc3dispensary.com

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FIRST TIME BUYER'S PROGRAMS !!!! $1000 Down. Many Homes Available! All SoCal Areas! Will consider Bad Credit. 4% APR. Call or Text Agent 562-673-4906

services 530 Misc. Services Living Elements Landscaping. The power of curb appeal. Landscape Design and Installation. All aspects of landscaping. Hardscape and artificial turf. Drought tolerant concepts. Licensed and insured. Lic #1013372 Warranty on all work. Convenient and reliable. Call (714)200-5668 FIRST TIME BUYER'S PROGRAMS!!!! $1000Down. Many Homes Available! All SoCal Areas! Will consider Bad Credit. 4% APR. Call or Text Agent 562-673-4906 ALL COUPLES NUPTIALS Where we specialize in officiating elopement-style weddings for any couple, anytime, anywhere! Serving all Of Orange county! (949) 315 2260 www.allcouplesnuptials.com WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

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Lower Elementary Head Teacher: Teach lower elem. students using Montessori methods; BA in Ed., English or rltd. AMI diploma. 40hrs/ wk; Apply to LePort Schools, HR, 1 Tech. Dr., Bldg H, Irvine, CA 92618

Auto Finance Solutions LLC is seeking a Risk Management Specialist in Irvine; Req.: Bach Deg in Finance + 5 months exp in lending/ finance. $48,069.00/ year. Email resume to: jochoa<\@>floorwithafs.com

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ADATA Technology (USA) Co., Ltd. seeks Product Marketing Analyst. Mstrs. in Bus. Admin., Mktg., Communication or IT reqd. 12 mth. exp. in any job title involv. product analysis of computer peripheral devices. Collaborate w/HQ re product design. Work site: Brea, CA. Mail resumes to: 880 Columbia St., Brea, CA 92821

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PCB Design Engr (Job code: PDE-SB) Design & layout complex, multi-layer PCBs using Altium 16. Reqs BS+2yrs exp. Mail resumes to Boundary Devices, Attn: HR, 21072 Bake Pkwy, Ste 100, Lake Forest, CA 92630. Must ref job title & code

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Employment

System Integration Analyst (Tustin, CA) Develop, create, and modify computer software for efficient system integration and operation. Master's in Info System/Engineering related. Resume to: Woongjin Inc. 335 Centennial Way #200, Tustin, CA 92780

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CONDITIONS: All advertisements are published upon the representation by the advertiser and/or agency that the agency and advertiser are authorized to publish the entire contents and subject matter thereof, that the contents are not unlawful, and do not infringe on the rights of any person or entity and that the agency and advertiser have obtained all necessary permission and releases. Upon the OC Weekly’s request, the agent or advertiser will produce all necessary permission and releases. In consideration of the publication of advertisements, the advertiser and agency will indemnify and save the OC Weekly harmless from and against any loss or expenses arising out of publication of such advertisements. The publisher reserves the right to revise, reject or omit without notice any advertisement at any time. The OC Weekly accepts no liability for it’s failure, for any cause, to insert an advertisement. Publication and placement of advertisements are not guaranteed. Liability for any error appearing in an advertisement is limited to the cost of the space actually occupied. No allowance, however, will be granted for an error that does not materially affect the value of an advertisement. To qualify for an adjustment, any error must be reported within 15 days of publication date. Credit for errors is limited to first insertion. Drawings, artwork and articles for reproduction are accepted only at the advertiser’s risk and should be clearly marked to facilitate their return. The OC Weekly reserves the right to revise its advertising rates at any time. Announcements of an increase shall be made four weeks in advance to contract advertisers. No verbal agreement altering the rates and/or the terms of this rate card shall be recognized.

Senior SAP Solution Developer sought by Applied Medical Resources Corporation, a medical device dvlpr & mftr (dsgn/dvlp/ responsible for full life cycle implmtn of Web DynproABAP). Bach's deg in Comp Sci, Mgmt Info Systems or related IT field or related w/ 5 yrs exp. Job loc: Rancho Santa Margarita, CA. E-mail resume to SAPCAREER@ appliedmedical.com.

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2975 Red18475 Hill Avenue, Suite 150CIR, | Costa Mesa, CAVALLEY, 92626 | CA 714.550.5940 free online ads & |photos at oc.backpage.com BANDILIER FOUNTAIN 92708 | | 714.550.5942 OCWEEKLY.COM

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37


| classifieds | music | culture | film | food | calendar | feature | the county | contents | JAN UA RY 12-18, 2 01 8

“W

here were you when [Donald] Trump was elected?” asked a man speaking on behalf of the

Democratic Club of West Orange County

BY MARY CARREON complacent and distracted—just as the government’s encouraged us to be. (It’s crazy how powerful capitalism and reality TV are, right?!) So Rouda makes a solid point. And it’s because of this collective awakening, people have also become privy to the asinine behavior of our most loathed congressman: Dirty Dana. The cities of Aliso Viejo, Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Irvine, Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Woods, Newport Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Seal Beach and Westminister comprise the 48th District. The Weekly has written about Rohrabacher (or, if you’re among the misguided in the cannabis realm, the “Weed Jesus”) for more than a decade, so we’ve got a lot of material on him. He’s been re-elected every time during the past 25 years, but he doesn’t actually live in Orange County. He has admitted to knowing Jeff Sessions since elementary school. He’s homies with the orange man and is being investigated for collusion in the Russia scandal. And, according to reports by R. Scott Moxley, our Congressman lives like Jabba the Hutt. As Moxley graphically reported, Rohrabacher’s million-dollar rental home in Costa Mesa was left in a condition even filthy frat bros would be ashamed of: “Massive black stains and muck covered the carpet throughout the home. Sticky, grime-encased, damaged, rusted appliances. . . . Blinds were cracked. Black dirt ruined the appearance of once-sparkling tile floors. Walls inexplicably contained odd holes, nail polish, wax and some smelly substance that may have been feces. Every toilet seat in the house was broken. . . . Clumps of hair and remnants of what may have been balloons or some other rubbery material clogged sinks. . . . Thick, solidified grease rendered the air-suction vent above the kitchen stove useless.” Rohrabacher’s wife, Rhonda, used the second floor of the house as her bedroom. It had a massive, strange, lubricant-like stain—Moxley describes it as something you might expect on the floor of a Hollywood sex club—that had seeped through thick carpet, tarnishing a hardwood floor. If that didn’t make you cringe, this will: It was also reported that white maggots squirmed underneath a kitchen stove. So that’s who our congressman is. At this point, it almost seems that having a mannequin as congressman would be better than having Rohrabacher in office, especially because he usually spends less than a week—cumulatively—in Orange County every year.

ROUDA IS ONE OF FOUR DEMOCRATS VYING FOR THE 48TH DISTRICT SEAT

JOHN GILHOOLEY

The bigger mess is that we only have until June 5 to figure out who’s going to take Rohrabacher’s place—and we don’t exactly have much room for error. So here’s the lowdown on three democratic candidates who were featured at the DCWOC last week: Rouda is a businessman, philanthropist and attorney. He received his MBA from Ohio State University and his J.D. from Capital University Law School. His motive for running for office is to bring common sense, fiscal responsibility and social pragmatism to District 48 and the country, according to a statement. Despite donating to Republican campaigns up until 2004, he’s stated publically that he’s a Democrat and not only voted for, but also truly believed in Hillary. He believes in climate change (thank God) and clean energy and is an advocate for science. He’s passionate about women’s rights and supports public education and affordable access to higher education. Like Rouda, Roberts is also from Laguna Beach. He’s a small-business owner and real-estate broker. He holds a BA in economics from Cal State San Bernardino, studied at Waseda University

in Tokyo and has 14 years of experience as a commodities broker. He voted for Bernie Sanders and wants to implement a cost-effective governance in which the public has full access to publicly owned resources. He also wants to make sure the Transportation Corridor Agencies are held accountable for their promise to make the toll roads free after 20 years of fee collection. Lastly, Oatman is a business owner, community activist and mother of five. She earned her BA at UC Irvine and a master’s in architecture from UCLA. She reportedly plans to bring shared values and forward-thinking solutions back to Washington, D.C. She is not a career politician or a billionaire. Rather, she is willing to ensure her kids and grandkids have the best education. She wants the best health care and a healthy, sustainable, peaceful planet, too. This Saturday, there’s another debate among congressional candidates at Harbour View Elementary School in Huntington Beach. If you hate what’s going on in the county, state and country, this weekend’s your time to do something about it! MCARREON@OCWEEKLY.COM

| OCWEEKLY.COM |

(DCWOC). “Where were you when he was inaugurated?” The crowd pondered these questions at the District 48 candidates’ forum at the Greenbrook Club House in Fountain Valley the evening of Jan. 4. The room went eerily silent, at which point I realized that question has the same spine-chilling effect as “Where were you when JFK was assassinated?” or “Where were you on 9/11?” Guess why? Because Nov. 8, 2016, was the day America basically got assassinated, and Jan. 20, 2017, was the day everyone realized what a royal embarrassment our country had become. With hopes to unseat current U.S. Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, dueling candidates Harley Rouda and Boyd Roberts answered questions from the public about the environment, what businesses and groups support them, and how they’ll handle certain situations if elected. Laura Oatman is also a candidate for Rohrabacher’s seat, but she wasn’t able to make it to the meeting because she had the flu (who doesn’t have the plague right now?). Pat Harris, the Democratic candidate running for U.S. Senate, was also at the meeting and spoke on these issues as well. There were nearly 65 people in attendance. According to a woman filling the water station at the snack bar, that’s 20 more people than the usual attendance for the DCWOC’s monthly meeting. The silver lining in this era of political chaos? The American people care more about politics than they have in decades. “Trump may do more for the progressive movement than Hillary [Clinton] would’ve ever done,” Rouda, a Laguna Beach resident, said to me as he mingled with the crowd before addressing them. “People are so pissed-off and so attentive to what’s going on politically that this step backward will actually move us forward.” As much as I’d rather saw my own arm off than give Trump credit for doing anything productive, Rouda’s right. Although Trump may go down as the worst U.S. President in history, people have woken up—and they’re continuing to wake up. For roughly the past three decades, the American people have given little to no shits about what’s happening in politics, with the exception of a few demonstrations, such as the Iraq invasion protest in Chicago. No one understood, and no one cared. Everyone has been

Imagine a world in which your congressman isn’t involved in the Russia investigation

M ON TH X X–X X , 2014

| ocweekly.com |

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